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European airports struggle to fix check-in glitch after cyberattack

Passengers faced long queues, cancellations and delays on Sept. 20.

People walk at Terminal 2 of the Heathrow International Airport, near London, Britain, March 22, 2025. / REUTERS/Isabel Infantes/File Photo

Some of Europe's biggest airports battled to restore normal operations on Sept. 21 after hackers disrupted automatic check-in systems, with Brussels asking airlines to cancel half of Sept. 22 flight departures due to persistent problems.

Hackers on Friday targeted check-in and boarding systems provider Collins Aerospace, owned by RTX, disrupting operations at London's Heathrow - Europe's busiest airport, Berlin Airport and in Brussels.

Passengers faced long queues, cancellations and delays on Sept. 20. While the disruption eased significantly in Berlin and Heathrow on Sept. 21, according to airport officials and data, delays and flight cancellations were continuing.

In a statement early on Sept. 22, Collins said it was working with four impacted airports and airline customers, and was in the final stages of completing the updates needed to restore full functionality.

A spokesperson for Brussels Airport said Collins Aerospace had not yet delivered a secure, updated version of the software necessary to restore full functionality, prompting the airport to seek the flight cancellations on Sept. 22.

Brussels Airport said 50 of Sept. 21's 257 scheduled departures had been cancelled to avoid long queues and last-minute cancellations. A day earlier, 25 of the planned 234 outgoing flights were cancelled, the airport operator said.

RTX said on Sept. 20 it was working to fix the issue as quickly as possible, and that the disruption could be mitigated with manual check-in operations.

It said the incident had impacted its MUSE software, which is used by several airlines.

One passenger flying from Brussels said the disruption to his journey had been minimal.

"For me, it was business as usual. For those poor souls who didn't do online check-in or have bags to check, they may be waiting a bit," he said.

Berlin Brandenburg Airport said on Sept. 21 some problems persisted but that a manual workaround was in place.

"Occasionally, there are longer waiting times at check-in, boarding, baggage handling and baggage reclaim. Delays to departing flights today are in line with a normal operating day," it said.

Heathrow said early on Sept. 21 that work was continuing to recover from the check-in system outage. It added that "the vast majority of flights have continued to operate".

An analysis by aviation data provider Cirium said delays at Heathrow were "low", Berlin had "moderate" delays, while Brussels had "significant" delays.

Regional regulators said they were investigating the source of the hacking, the latest in a string of hacks to hit sectors from healthcare to autos. A breach at carmaker Jaguar Land Rover halted production, while another caused Marks & Spencer losses in the hundreds of millions of pounds.

 

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