logo
'I need to be home:' Stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

'I need to be home:' Stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

Gulf Today21-03-2025

Thousands of travellers stranded by a huge fire near London's Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport, scrambled to find ways to get home and reunite with their families on Friday as they faced what could be days of disruptions.
Heathrow was shut after a blaze that erupted overnight at a substation in the west of London, knocking out power to the airport and surrounding area.
Airlines advised passengers not to travel to Heathrow.
Waiting at central London's Paddington station, which normally offers express train services to Heathrow, US citizen Tyler Prieb was contacting airlines to find a way back home to Nashville, Tennessee.
"I'm sure everybody is going to need a new flight somewhere, somehow. So I'm just trying to get ahead of that the best I can," said Prieb, 36, who was in London for work and to see friends.
"Hopefully, it will just take me an extra day to get back to my wife and my daughter," he said.
In the meantime, Prieb said he had asked OpenAI's chatbot ChatGPT for ways to pass the time. "I thought maybe I'd go explore another city somewhere," he said.
People wait at the Paddington railway station, after a fire at a nearby electrical substation wiped out power at the Heathrow International Airport, in London on Friday. Reuters
Heathrow was due to handle 1,351 flights on Friday, flying up to 291,000 passengers.
John Moriarty, another US traveller, listened attentively to his phone's speaker, hoping to get through to customer service and book a new flight home to Boston to see his daughter, who had travelled from New York to visit him.
"All the lines are busy, so I might be here another day. Not the worst thing in the world. (London) is my favourite city, but I need to be home," 75-year-old Moriarty said.
'PRETTY STRESSED OUT'
Travel experts said the disruption would extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules would be affected more broadly.
"I'm pretty stressed out," Robyn Autry, 39, from New York, said. "I do have animals back home that I need to get to."
The university professor said she was looking at "very, very expensive" flights out of other London airports and considering departures from cities including Bristol and Manchester.
"I think I'm going to have to pay a lot of money out of pocket today," she said.
Chicago couple Anna Schiferl, 26, and Charlie Katt, 27, said they were experiencing the latest episode in a long history of holiday adversity, including out-of-season hurricanes, illnesses and apartment rental misadventures.
"We're engaged, and we've had just horrible travel luck ... our whole relationship," Schiferl said. "We are with each other so that's good. We have enough clothes, enough underwear. We're going to be fine."
Mahmoud Ali, 40, an employee of Domino's Pizza in London, had been due to fly to his native Pakistan to be with his wife and children, who he has not seen since last summer.
"They are waiting for me. I'm trying to call the airline and Heathrow (to find out) what time the situation will be resolved," he said.
The fire also forced the rerouting of incoming flights, leaving some passengers unsure of where they would land.
Adrian Spender, who works at British retailer Tesco, said in a post on X that he was on an Airbus A380 that had been headed for Heathrow.
"#Heathrow no idea where we are going yet. Currently over Austria," he wrote.
Reuters

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UAE: How you can use ChatGPT to help you save money
UAE: How you can use ChatGPT to help you save money

Khaleej Times

time05-06-2025

  • Khaleej Times

UAE: How you can use ChatGPT to help you save money

There are hundreds of AI tools available now as artificial intelligence and machine learning take off. But ChatGPT dominates the headlines with its 400 million weekly active users. As a highly capable chatbot, many users are experimenting with it for all sorts of help, both professional and personal. So, how does it stack up when it comes to saving money? Cheap flights Saving money when booking flights is topical as many people will be jetting away soon for summer breaks. Plus, we are seeing more social media content about how AI and ChatGPT saved people money when booking flights. I have spoken to many people about these claims and if ChatGPT saved them money on flights, while doing my own research. The platform has a range of Generative Pre-Trained Transformers (GPTs) for booking cheap flights, including Fly GPT, AirTrack GPT and direct access to KAYAK, a popular flight and hotel search engine. The trick is asking the right questions, or prompts. For example, you could ask it to 'Find me the cheapest flight from Dubai to London in July under $500.' Or 'What's the best time to fly from Dubai to Tokyo for the lowest fares?' ChatGPT will use well-known flight scanning platforms like KAYAK, Expedia, and Skyscanner to pull together its answers. These sites have also integrated AI into their own search engines along with other popular sites like Google Flights and Hopper. This allows them to offer features like flight alerts and price predictions. ChatGPT's advantage is that it will search across multiple websites, not just one. Another usefulness of ChatGPT is its ability to explore different hacks and tactics to find the cheapest flight options if your dates and destination airport are flexible. For example, you could ask it 'What days are cheapest to fly to New York?' or 'What airports near Paris are cheaper to fly into?' The cheapest days to book are often Tuesdays and Wednesdays, while midweek is usually the cheapest days to fly. Another popular prompt is to type: 'Act like a travel agent. I want to go to (destination) in August on a budget. Recommend cheap routes, airlines, dates, and tips.' Daily budgeting When it comes to saving money in other areas, ChatGPT says it can help you budget better, asking you upload a bank statement so it can break down your spending and offer advice. I tried this and I was impressed by the results. It listed all my spending into categories (travel, eating out, subscriptions etc) and then gave me some tips on how to save money. For example, I spent money on expensive snacks at the airport and it advised me to buy them cheaper at a supermarket and pack them in my carry-on. Banking If you are looking for the best savings accounts available in the UAE, no one site compares all the latest offers in one place. Using ChatGPT is a good starting point as it will give you names of banks that are offering the highest rates if you type the right prompt. But it is just that – a starting point. You still need to go to each bank's website to check the interest rate, see if the offer is still available and read the small print. Daily deals ChatGPT did recommend some useful money-saving sites that are popular in the UAE such as The Entertainer, Groupon and Cobone. If you've not heard of Cobone before, it describes itself as the Middle East's biggest 'daily deals', or group buying, site featuring discounts on the best things to do, see, eat and buy in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Kuwait. I checked out all websites and they did feature a wide range of offers across shopping, staycations, dining and more. ChatGPT also offered me sites like Keepa, which tracks millions of products and prices on Amazon. However, this website won't track prices from A better option might be its other recommendation of Honey, a free browser extension by PayPal that automatically searches for discounts and coupon codes during the checkout stage. Smart shopping Supermarket and grocery shopping has become more expensive in the UAE but can ChatGPT help you search for the cheapest products among all the different chains here? In the UK, there's a popular app called Trolley, which is a supermarket comparison tool that finds the cheapest grocery prices across 16+ UK supermarkets. Type in blueberries, for example, and it will tell you which supermarket is selling them at the cheapest price. When asked, ChatGPT said it can give me price comparison tools for UAE supermarkets (e.g., Carrefour vs. Lulu). It recommended Pricena, although this is just for electronics, and Yaoota, which is an Egyptian e-commerce platform. Neither was useful in my quest to save money on my supermarket shop. There is currently no price comparison website for supermarkets in the UAE. Now that's food for thought.

'I need to be home:' Stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
'I need to be home:' Stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

Gulf Today

time21-03-2025

  • Gulf Today

'I need to be home:' Stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

Thousands of travellers stranded by a huge fire near London's Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport, scrambled to find ways to get home and reunite with their families on Friday as they faced what could be days of disruptions. Heathrow was shut after a blaze that erupted overnight at a substation in the west of London, knocking out power to the airport and surrounding area. Airlines advised passengers not to travel to Heathrow. Waiting at central London's Paddington station, which normally offers express train services to Heathrow, US citizen Tyler Prieb was contacting airlines to find a way back home to Nashville, Tennessee. "I'm sure everybody is going to need a new flight somewhere, somehow. So I'm just trying to get ahead of that the best I can," said Prieb, 36, who was in London for work and to see friends. "Hopefully, it will just take me an extra day to get back to my wife and my daughter," he said. In the meantime, Prieb said he had asked OpenAI's chatbot ChatGPT for ways to pass the time. "I thought maybe I'd go explore another city somewhere," he said. People wait at the Paddington railway station, after a fire at a nearby electrical substation wiped out power at the Heathrow International Airport, in London on Friday. Reuters Heathrow was due to handle 1,351 flights on Friday, flying up to 291,000 passengers. John Moriarty, another US traveller, listened attentively to his phone's speaker, hoping to get through to customer service and book a new flight home to Boston to see his daughter, who had travelled from New York to visit him. "All the lines are busy, so I might be here another day. Not the worst thing in the world. (London) is my favourite city, but I need to be home," 75-year-old Moriarty said. 'PRETTY STRESSED OUT' Travel experts said the disruption would extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules would be affected more broadly. "I'm pretty stressed out," Robyn Autry, 39, from New York, said. "I do have animals back home that I need to get to." The university professor said she was looking at "very, very expensive" flights out of other London airports and considering departures from cities including Bristol and Manchester. "I think I'm going to have to pay a lot of money out of pocket today," she said. Chicago couple Anna Schiferl, 26, and Charlie Katt, 27, said they were experiencing the latest episode in a long history of holiday adversity, including out-of-season hurricanes, illnesses and apartment rental misadventures. "We're engaged, and we've had just horrible travel luck ... our whole relationship," Schiferl said. "We are with each other so that's good. We have enough clothes, enough underwear. We're going to be fine." Mahmoud Ali, 40, an employee of Domino's Pizza in London, had been due to fly to his native Pakistan to be with his wife and children, who he has not seen since last summer. "They are waiting for me. I'm trying to call the airline and Heathrow (to find out) what time the situation will be resolved," he said. The fire also forced the rerouting of incoming flights, leaving some passengers unsure of where they would land. Adrian Spender, who works at British retailer Tesco, said in a post on X that he was on an Airbus A380 that had been headed for Heathrow. "#Heathrow no idea where we are going yet. Currently over Austria," he wrote. Reuters

'I need to be home': stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
'I need to be home': stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

Zawya

time21-03-2025

  • Zawya

'I need to be home': stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

Thousands of travellers stranded by a huge fire near London's Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport, scrambled to find ways to get home and reunite with their families on Friday as they faced what could be days of disruptions. Heathrow was shut as around 70 firefighters sought to put down the blaze at a nearby electrical substation in the west of London that knocked out power at the airport as well as the area's back-up power system. Airlines advised passengers not to travel to the airport, and Britain's energy minister Ed Miliband warned it would take time to recover from the "catastrophic" fire. Waiting at central London's Paddington station, which normally offers express train service to Heathrow, U.S. traveller Tyler Prieb contacted airlines Friday morning, hoping to find a new flight back to his home in Nashville, Tennessee. "I'm sure everybody is going to need a new flight somewhere, somehow. So I'm just trying to get ahead of that the best I can," said Prieb, 36, who was in London for work and to see friends. "Hopefully, it will just take me an extra day to get back to my wife and my daughter. And they are probably wishing I would be home already," he said. In the meantime, Prieb said he had asked OpenAI's chatbot ChatGPT for ways to pass the time. "I thought maybe I'd go explore another city somewhere," he said. Heathrow was due to handle 1,351 flights during the day, flying up to 291,000 passengers. A Heathrow spokesperson told Reuters in an email that there was no clarity on when power would be restored, and they expected significant disruption over the coming days. John Moriarty, another U.S. traveller, listened attentively to his phone's speaker, hoping to get through to his airline's customer service helpline. The 75-year-old said he was anxious to return to Boston to see his daughter, who had travelled from New York to visit him. "All the lines are busy, so I might be here another day. Not the worst thing in the world. (London) is my favourite city, but I need to be home," 75-year-old John Moriarty said. Travel experts said the disruption would extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules will be affected more broadly, as many aircraft will now be out of position. Mahmoud Ali, 40, an employee of Domino's Pizza in London, had been due to fly to his native Pakistan to be with his wife and children, who he has not seen since last summer. "They are waiting for me. I'm trying to call the airline and Heathrow (to find out) what time the situation will be resolved," he said. The fire has also forced the rerouting of incoming flights, leaving passengers unsure of where they will land. Some flights from the United States were turning around mid-air and returning to their point of departure. Adrian Spender, who works at British retailer Tesco, said in a post on X that he was on an Airbus A380 that had been headed for Heathrow. "#Heathrow no idea where we are going yet. Currently over Austria," he wrote.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store