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While they waited five days for a flight, she said, "My biggest worry was the baby." She and other passengers, while relieved at getting airborne at last, showed continued concern about the ash. "I've read that the exploratory flights were safe, but I'm still a bit worried," she said. Australia's Qantas canceled its Wednesday and Thursday flights from Asia to Frankfurt and London, as well as return flights to Asia, saying the situation was too uncertain to resume flights into Europe. It will take a while for full traffic to resume, and not everyone who wanted to could get on a flight Tuesday. Phil Livingstone, a university student from St. Helens, England spent three nights sleeping on chairs at Seoul's Incheon International Airport and living off noodles and the one meal a day the authorities provided.
"Hope is high at the minute just because it's the only thing we've got," he said. Some stranded passengers stuck stickers reading "Lost in Transit" to their chests. Optimism about airport reopenings was tempered by a statement from the British National Air Traffic Service early Tuesday, which said "the volcanic eruption in Iceland has strengthened and a new ash cloud is spreading south and east towards the U.K." Jonathan Astill, head of airspace management at Britain's National Air Traffic Service, told the BBC that London airports would likely remain closed through Wednesday. Flights resumed in Scotland, but only for a handful of domestic flights. The British naval ship HMS Albion picked up hundreds of troops and civilians to take them back to the UK and two other British naval vessels were en route to rescue marooned British travelers from the Continent. Europe's aviation industry -- facing losses of more than $1 billion
-- has sharply criticized government handling of the disruption that grounded thousands of flights to and from the continent. But the international pilots' federation said Tuesday that a return to flight operations in Europe will be possible only if the final decisions are left to the pilots themselves, and are based on safety concerns rather than economics.
Gideon Ewers, spokesman of the London-based pilots group, says historical evidence of the effects of volcanic ash demonstrates that it presents a very real threat to flight safety. Ash and grit from volcanic eruptions can sabotage a plane in many ways, stalling engines, blocking fuel nozzles, and plugging the tubes that sense airspeed. Truck driver Mike Kelly, 62, and his wife Wendy, 60, of Somerset, England, simply decided to wait out the ash in Sydney, where their son lives, after being stuck at Singapore's Changi International Airport for five nights. "We're heading back to Sydney today. We heard there might be another volcano explosion so we'd prefer to wait it out on a beach in Sydney," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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