Tragedy Strikes travel and dothingsin dead bodies found… Police say

Tragedy Strikes travel and dothingsin dead bodies found… Police say

Home Customer Service Stay Connected Read today’s Edition Real Estate Weekly Local Events News Sports Food & Entertainment Opinion Obituaries Featured The Cambrian Shopping/Reviews Press Releases Sponsored Content Classifieds Place an Ad – Celebrations Search Jobs Search Legal Notices Advertising Enjoy 3 months for 99¢! SAVE NOW BUSINESS This simple mistake keeps costing travelers flights and vacations BY VERONIKA BONDARENKO THESTREET UPDATED SEPTEMBER 24, 2024 2:06 PM As some travelers discover the hard way and others through horror stories that circulate on social media, the degree to which a passport has to be damaged in order to still be accepted for travel will vary widely from airline to airline and even the country one plans to visit. Last June, 25-year-old traveler Laila March had to spend £1,200 (roughly $1,600 USD) after TUI Group (TUIFY) denied her boarding on a booked flight from London to Cancun over what she described as a “slight mark” on the biodata page of her passport. The £1,000 (approximately $1,330 USD) she paid for her initial ticket was lost while British Airways accepted her on a same-day flight with the same passport without issueRead more at:

Virgin Australia decided that this microscopic coffee stain on Brooke’s passport made it ‘unreadable’ and denied us boarding our flight to Bali,” Ferres wrote in a Facebook (META) post to his 11,000 followers. “This is the same stained passport we’ve flown to 20+ counties with – including Bali TWICE.”

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