Airline try to apply force majeure in case of weather...air transat try to do the same thing down here last summer...but CTA ruled when the fog dissipate force majeure rules cannot come into play...then it becomes airlines responsibility. Europe has one of the stringent compensation plans...Ryanair tried to apply force majeure in the case Icelandic volcanic eruption...which was denied too.
The Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) has ruled Air Transat broke its agreement with passengers when it left them in two planes stranded on the tarmac of the Ottawa International Airport on July 31.
The agency found that though the initial diversion was out of Air Transat's control, the delays were not, completely, and it should have still been able to fulfill its obligation to passengers for food, drink and an opportunity to disembark.
Your situation...is different...who are you going to sue...the state?...Asia is not known for customer protection/or rights
They settled it within 3 days of lawsuit...UA needed to settle quickly; if the case goes to trial it would be PR nightmare
The Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) has ruled Air Transat broke its agreement with passengers when it left them in two planes stranded on the tarmac of the Ottawa International Airport on July 31.
The agency found that though the initial diversion was out of Air Transat's control, the delays were not, completely, and it should have still been able to fulfill its obligation to passengers for food, drink and an opportunity to disembark.
Your situation...is different...who are you going to sue...the state?...Asia is not known for customer protection/or rights
If airlines in US/Canada faces lawsuits for ill-treatment of PAX, then kindly advice what exactly was the action taken against Delta/United for dragging PAX along the aircraft aisles and getting kicked out of the flight by crew as I very well remember the above took headlines all over the world?

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