Passport e-gates back online after outage causes delays at UK airports
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A ânationwide issueâ which caused huge delays at passport e-gates has been resolved, the Home Office has said.
Airports including Heathrow, Gatwick, Edinburgh, Birmingham, Bristol, Newcastle and Manchester all confirmed a Border Force problem was causing delays with arrivals late on Tuesday.
Pictures and videos on social media showed long queues.
A passenger in Manchester said he had queued for 90 minutes, while another in Heathrow described âchaotic scenesâ.
E-gates are automated gates that use facial recognition to check a personâs identity and allow them to enter the country without talking to a Border Force officer.
There are more than 270 of them in place at 15 air and rail ports in the UK, according to the governmentâs website, which also says they are supposed to âenable quicker travel into the UKâ.
The Home Office, which oversees Border Force, said in a statement early on Wednesday: âeGates at UK airports came back online shortly after midnight.â
A spokesperson said that âat no point was border security compromised, and there is no indication of malicious cyber activityâ.
They extended apologies to âtravellers caught up in disruptionâ and thanked âpartners, including airlines for their co-operation and supportâ during the outage.
However, the problem did not appear to not just be affecting the e-gates themselves, as Belfast International Airport, which does not have them, said the Border Force âsystemsâ had been impacted.
While the issues were underway, Manchester Airport said its customer-services colleagues were supporting passengers by handing out water to those experiencing delays. It added any excess charges for people who are late to leave car parks as a result of the problems would also be waived.
Steven Brownrigg, who arrived on a flight into Manchester Airport, told the BBC there were âseveral flights in quick succession, which meant a lot of passengersâ queueing for passport control.
âI was in the queue for around 90 minutes. Priority was given to families with small children and vulnerable passengers, and staff were handing out bottled water to everyone,â he said.
âGenerally, most were frustrated but accepted the situation, but a few people were unhappy and questioned staff.â
âTotally blankâ
A passenger at Heathrow described border officials rushing to manually process passport holders.
âAll the e-gates were totally blank and there was just a lot of chaotic scenes,â said Sam Morter, 32, who was returning after a holiday in Sri Lanka.
He said he made it through the airport after about 90 minutes.
Samira, who had arrived from Spain, said people were distressed and âeveryone was arguingâ, while Julian, who had flown in from Lisbon, said: âIâve spent longer in the terminal than I did in the air.â
Tuesday is not the first time the UKâs automated e-gates have stopped working. Airports were also impacted by an IT issue in May 2023.
And in August last year, around 2,000 flights at airports across the UK were cancelled when the National Air Traffic Services system for automatically processing flight plans failed, leaving passengers stranded.
Additional reporting by Nicky Schiller