Tag: Hurricane

  • Hurricane Sandy alters Nigerian passengers’ travel plans

    Hurricane Sandy alters Nigerian passengers’ travel plans

    The post-tropical storm crippling some states in the United States has forced many travelling from Nigeria to re-adjust their plans as airlines cancel thousands of flights, writes OLUKOREDE YISHAU

    Tempers flared Monday night at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos and the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja. Passengers and airline officials were at opposing sides__no thanks to Hurricane Sandy, the post-tropical superstorm pummeling some states in the United States.

    Many a passenger were turned back from the airports because airlines suddenly cancelled flights in a bid to ensure the safety of their aircraft and passengers.

    Passengers travelling through Frankfurt to Washington DC first had an inkling of the flights cancellation when they could not complete their online check-in.

    By Monday morning, American, Delta, United and US Airways had each cancelled more than 1,000 flights arriving or departing Northeast airports from Sunday through Wednesday. United Airlines cancelled 3,700 flights. Delta Airline cancelled 2,100 and American Airline cancelled 1,571, US Airways cancelled 1,600.

    As a result of the global cancellation of flights, passengers travelling to the United States from Nigeria have been forced to remain at home.

    Hurricane Sandy has led to the closure of New York’s JFK and LaGuardia airports and Newark in New Jersey “until further notice”.

    Since Monday, Lufthansa Airline and British Airways have been turning back passengers from Nigeria’s international airports, such as the Murtala Muhammed International Airport,Lagos and the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja.

    United Airline, however, still flies passengers to its Houston-Texas base.

    A passenger due to travel with the airline yesterday said: “ I have just called them and they say they are not cancelling the flight.”

    A journalist from Ghana, Sylvio Combey Combetey, said his flight to New York was aborted because of the hurricane.

    He said: “ I am actually in Atlanta and will be in Washington tomorrow. I could not go to New York because of the Hurricane.”

    Lufthansa officials at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport yesterday said the airline cancelled the flights because of its concern for the safety of its passengers.

    With flights canceled to and from New York, Boston, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and Baltimore, Lufthansa and British Airways have offered to rebook flights for their passengers due to travel to the U.S. East Coast.

    A statement on Lufthansa ‘s website said: “Due to the hurricane ‘Sandy’ and the resulting airport closures several flights to and from Eastcoast USA had to be cancelled for Monday 29, October 2012 and Tuesday 30, October 2012. Please check for the status of your flight prior to your departure.

    “If you have booked a Lufthansa flight flight to/from New York, Boston, Philadelphia or Washington before October 29th, 2012 for travel until November 2nd, 2012 you may rebook free of charge under certain circumstances.”

    A statement on BA’s website said: “We understand that customers may be disappointed, however their safety is our highest priority.”

    Virgin Atlantic also canceled all flights to New York, Boston and Washington. London’s Heathrow Airport is advising U.S.-bound passengers to check their flight status before traveling to the airport.

    Qatar Airways and the United Arab Emirates-based airlines Etihad and Emirates also canceled flights to the U.S. northeast. In a statement , Emirates said the safety of their passengers “will not be compromised.”

    United Airlines spokesman Rahsaan Johnson said: “Our operations team has been working since Friday on scenarios that would accommodate customers flying to and from the East Coast this weekend, while also moving our airplanes out of Sandy’s way to avoid having them stuck in airports in Sandy’s path.

    “While cancellations are never convenient, we hope customers understand that we are focused first and foremost on operating safely. We are also striving to minimize the impact on travelers booked on flights outside the East Coast.”

    Assessing the financial impact of the storm on airlines and other transportation companies will take time. What is clear is that, according to airlines and flight-tracking website FlightAware.com, carriers had cancelled more than 12,200 flights as of midday Monday. The Global Business Travel Association last year estimated that hurricane, interrupts roughly 580,000 business trips, costing airlines, rental car companies, hotels and others nearly $700 million.

    Vice president of research for the association Joe Bates said the estimate did not take Hurricane Sandy into account. He said the storm is expected to last twice as long as the other storms used for its estimate.

    A passenger billed to fly from Lagos to Washington on Monday night said: “The hurricane has ruined a lot of things. So many people can never regain what has been lost again.”

  • Hurricane Sandy lashes New York

    Hurricane Sandy lashes New York

    The city that never sleeps resembled one that clearly does.

    Even Lady Liberty seemed to doze yesterday as she faded in and out of view, shrouded in mist swirling over the whitecaps of New York’s harbour as Hurricane Sandy crept closer to the city. On land, streets that normally are jammed at the start of the workweek were nearly deserted save for emergency workers and gawkers who couldn’t resist watching the rivers, the harbour and the sea rise around them.

    “I don’t think the flood is really going to get all the way to our apartment,” Nicholas Martin said hopefully — and a bit uncertainly — as he stood at the end of a street that drops off into the harbor, in Brooklyn’s Red Hook neighborhood. He sipped a cup of coffee and watched water rippling in from the harbor and spreading over the street. It crept up the side of a brick warehouse on the avenue, and around a telephone pole, tiny waves rippling in the wind.

    His friend, Malinda Brown, said the pair had briefly considered evacuating but opted to stay put, convinced they would be safe. They weren’t regretting their decision, at least not yet. Farther up the street, though, others apparently had had a change of heart. Three people hastily piled suitcases and bundles of belongings into a pickup truck and drove off.

    With Sandy’s full impact still several hours away, sporadic blackouts were beginning, from New Jersey to Connecticut. On suburban Long Island, 54,000 people were without electricity by midday. More than 52,000 people had lost power in New Jersey, and 25,000 were in the dark in Connecticut.

    The morning’s high tide sent water washing over some oceanfront boardwalks, parking lots, residential avenues and heavily traveled thoroughfares. Speed limits on bridges were reduced to as low as 20 mph as winds picked up. The gusts proved too much for a construction crane atop a building in midtown Manhattan, at 7th Avenue and West 57th Street. It toppled over and was left dangling in the wind, dozens of stories above the streets, prompting officials to close off the area. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

    Officials in Manhattan closed large sections of FDR Drive, which skirts the eastern edge of the island, because of flooding. On Manhattan’s southern tip, in Battery Park, workers piled additional sandbags after the harbor surged over the walkway along the water.

    The evening tide was expected to be far higher, and the one after that — early Tuesday — higher yet. The Holland Tunnel linking Manhattan to New Jersey, and the Hugh Carey Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel that connects lower Manhattan to Brooklyn, were closed because of potential flooding, and Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that the city would face a second day of virtual shutdown Tuesday.

    Schools were to remain closed, Bloomberg said, and the New York Stock Exchange would also stay dark. Subways were expected to remain closed as well.

    “You can look outside and say, ‘Oh, this is not bad.’ That’s correct, but it is going to be,” Bloomberg said as he pleaded, yet again, for the roughly 375,000 New York City residents living in flood-prone areas to heed mandatory evacuation orders.

    The city set up more than 70 emergency shelters to accommodate people who had no friends or relatives to stay with, but only about 3,000 people had registered at the centers.

    That number seemed likely to rise, if the scene at Seward Park High School in Manhattan was anything to go by. As Sandy neared landfall and as rain began pelting streets nearly devoid of the usual signs of city life, people began streaming into the shelter, pushing suitcases and hampers filled with belongings and often leading small children by the hand.

    “I expect a big rush later,” said Don West, deputy chief of the Community Emergency Response Team, as two women accompanied by three children checked themselves in. Cots — 900 of them — filled the school’s two gymnasiums and lined the second-floor hallways. At least 450 had filled up since the shelter opened Sunday night. “I don’t know where the overflow goes,” said West.

    In the school’s auditorium, evacuees sat like bored students at an assembly, watching a small TV blare more Sandy updates as they busied themselves with Sudoko games and crossword puzzles.

    Lillian Ward sat on a blue cot inside a gymnasium, hopeful that Monday would be her last of two nights there. Ward lives in one of the city’s 26 public housing developments in mandatory evacuation zones, and she left after the city warned that it would shut off hot water and power — including elevator service — in those buildings to ensure people left.

    “They came and knocked on everybody’s door Sunday,” said Ward, who felt she had no option: She lives on the ninth floor of her building and didn’t want to be stuck there in the dark, having to climb the stairs to her apartment.

    Yanira Lassalle also had no choice but to come to the shelter. That’s because she was living in a nearby homeless shelter, which ordered everyone out Sunday.

    “I’d rather be at the other shelter. At least we have our own rooms there,” said Lassalle, gazing out across a room full of mainly women and children. She was skeptical about the storm’s potential impact, even as the sky darkened outside. “If it was going to be that bad, it would’ve been bad already,” she said.

    Ward disagreed. “I’m not taking any chances. I just want to wait it out,” she said.