Travel Groups Urge EU to Suspend EES as 5-Hour Border Queues Hit Summer Flights
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 2
Travel Groups Urge EU to Suspend EES as 5-Hour Border Queues Hit Summer Flights
3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 2
Summary
Airports, airlines and travel groups asked the European Commission to pause the EU Entry/Exit System for the summer peak, saying border waits have climbed to as much as five hours since April.
The biometric regime requires most non-EU travellers, including Britons, to register facial images and fingerprints before entering the Schengen area, adding checks that carriers say are leaving some flights half full.
Lisbon suspended the system after seven-hour waits last year, while passengers were stranded in Milan in April and missed flights from Athens and Malaga after long queues.
French police already used an EES clause to temporarily relax checks at Dover in May, but ACI Europe said only national governments can decide on wider suspensions.
Passengers who miss flights may get little help: airlines can treat border delays as extraordinary circumstances, insurers say losses are unlikely to be covered, and one family paid £1,000 for replacement tickets.