Ryanair cabin crew: ‘Enough is enough’

Photo: Facebook Ryanair
Photo: Facebook Ryanair

Low-cost airline Ryanair has asked the UK government to take action to help prevent drunkenness onboard its flights. Europe’s biggest airline, as of 2016 when it carried 7.3 million passengers more than Lufthansa figure of 109.7 million, said that alcohol abuse aboard its aircraft increased by 50 percent in one year, almost always involving British passengers.

Cabin crew have said they are “overwhelmed” by the situation.

The Irish airline has asked the British authorities to prohibit the sale of alcohol at airports before 10 am, to limit consumption to two glasses before a flight and to prohibit onboard drinking of alcohol purchased at duty free.

According to the UK’s Civil Aviation Authority, incivility on aircraft has increased by 600 percent in the space of five years. While easyJet dominates at Nice Airport, Ryanair has several flights every day to Marseille-Provence.

July 2017 was Ryanair’s busiest month with airline carrying 12.7 million customers.


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Ministers deny connection to drugs baron

Gerald Darminin. Photo:  EglantineD
Gerald Darminin. Photo: EglantineD

Gérald Darmanin, France’s Minister of Public Accounts, and Sébastien Lecornu, Secretary of State to the Minister in charge of Energy Transition, have reacted angrily to reports they acted improperly in renting a villa in Corsica.

Mediapart, the investigative news website, claimed that the two men rented a villa belonging to Christelle Godani, Miss Corse 1993 and a close friend of the former President of the Ajaccio Chamber of Commerce, Gilbert Casanova, who was also described as an owner of the property.

This “ex-drug trafficker”, according to Mediapart, was sentenced in March 2005 to three years in prison for “abuse of social goods” and “fraudulent bankruptcy”. A few years later, the Correctional Court of Marseille sentenced him to eight years in prison for organising cannabis traffic between Morocco and France.

According to Mediapart, the rent of the 180-sqm villa was €4,000 a week.

Darmanin and Lecornu were quick to react. In a Facebook post, they said they are considering a lawsuit against Mediapart for defamation. The two ministers said they booked the villa with friends via the homeholidays.com website, “like millions of French”.


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