ID card chaos as travel firms blunder
Katherine Faulkener and Rhiannon Edwards write in the Manchester Evening News:
Some 1,736 people in Greater Manchester have bought the £30 cards after the Home Office promised they could be used to travel in Europe.
But customer service staff at nine major travel companies – including British Airways, Eurostar and BMI baby – told M.E.N reporters posing as customers that the cards could NOT be used instead of passports.
Eight of the nine companies later issued statements saying staff had given the wrong advice – and that the cards COULD be used after all. But Eurostar remained unsure. A spokesman said: “We are unable to confirm whether the ID cards are valid on Eurostar at this time.”
Meanwhile two major German airlines said they would not accept the cards until they had been officially recognised by the German federal authorities.
In a separate article, they report:
Meanwhile student Cyrus Nayeri, from Denton, said he was treated like a criminal by staff at airline German Wings when he showed them his ID card.
Cyrus, 18, who was travelling from Stansted to Bonn on an educational trip, was taken into a side room and told he could not fly.
He said: “It was like they thought I was trying to use a fake document.
“I was one of the biggest supporters of the scheme but now I definitely wouldn’t recommend them to anyone.”
When Mr Nayeri complained, airline staff eventually phoned British government officials – and let him on the plane at the last minute.
But a German Wings spokesman later confirmed the company would NOT be accepting the ID cards in future, until they are recognised by the German Federal Police.






December 23rd, 2009 at 13:23
serves ‘em bloody right for being so stupid!
December 23rd, 2009 at 14:18
Hahahahahahahahahahaha
December 23rd, 2009 at 18:07
More of the famous “joined-up government”, I see.
December 24th, 2009 at 12:03
Are these the same ID cards Smith said ‘people couldn’t wait to get hold of’?
ps. Don’t take any tin money!
Happy Christmas, one and all.