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Opinion | Profit-making airlines are refusing refunds – why do they insist on plundering the people’s pockets?

  • Yes, the pandemic has grounded flights. But why should those who have paid for a service not get a refund?
  • Flying against EU law, certain airlines are citing an ‘unprecedented situation’ as a reason for not offering refunds

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The destination board at Munich airport shows cancelled Lufthansa flights. The German airline has refused a refund to a teenager whose flights to and and from Hong Kong for a high school reunion were cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic. Photo: AFP

My teenage son is locked in an unequal struggle with one of the world’s most profitable airlines, and there’s clearly going to be only one winner.

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He spent the money he’d saved up from two years of weekend jobs to buy a HK$5,000 (US$645) ticket from Lufthansa to fly to Hong Kong at Easter and spend a fortnight with the friends he grew up with before his final year of school in Britain.

The flight, of course, was cancelled because of coron­a­virus. But the German airline, which made a profit of 2 billion (US$2.2 billion) in 2019, won’t give him his money back because it has decided it needs his HK$5,000 more than he does.

Under European Union law, an airline that cancels a flight must provide a refund within seven days. But because of what it calls “this unprecedented situation”, Lufthansa is refusing to do so and is instead offering a voucher for non-existent flights or the opportunity to rebook on another flight that won’t take off because of coronavirus.

Empty Lufthansa check-in counters at Frankfurt airport, on March 12. Photo: AFP
Empty Lufthansa check-in counters at Frankfurt airport, on March 12. Photo: AFP
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My son is not going to go hungry or find himself begging on the streets as a result of losing his savings. He may even learn a useful life lesson that will make him more mature, reflective and less willing to take people at their word.

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