Hell at Heathrow: 2,000 arrivals queue for up to 90 minutes at Terminal 5 after e-gates close
Hell at Heathrow: 2,000 arrivals queue for up to 90 minutes at Terminal 5 with just ‘four’ Border Force officials checking papers after e-gates are SHUT
- Passengers were left queuing at Heathrow Terminal 5 border after e-gates close
- One person said they waited for up to 90 minutes in the border queue last night
- They claimed there were ‘four’ Border Force staff working at passport control
- Twitter users said Heathrow staff brought out water for exasperated passengers
A Heathrow Airport border area was thrown into chaos last night with e-gate closures sparking 90 minute-long queues.
It is believed just four Border Force officials were left manning Terminal 5 passport hall last night, when as many as 2,000 passengers arrived.
One person caught up in the border chaos said it was ‘totally unacceptable’, while another exasperated passenger described the situation as ‘ridiculous’.
MailOnline has approached the Border Force, who are in charge of the operation, and Heathrow Airport for comment.
Twitter users last night slammed the lack of border staff, saying they had spent up to an hour and 45 minutes queuing at Terminal 5’s passport hall.
They said: ‘Hi Heathrow. Is it because of the pingdemic that there’s thousands at border control and maybe 3 staff checking us in?!
It is believed just four Border Force officials were left manning Terminal 5 passport hall last night when as many as 2,000 passengers arrived. Picture: Passengers queue at Heathrow Airport last night
Passengers at the airport say the e-gates were closed last night, while there were ‘just four’ Border Force staff working
‘By my calculations I’m here until 2am. There’s babies toddlers & elderly in the queue.’
They said in a follow-up tweet: ‘There is a palette of water cans in the middle of the queue where people go help themselves as they go since we’re all here for hours.
‘Kids crying. The occasional shouts for opening more gates. People about to miss their connections. It’s such a s***show.
‘No e gates tonight of course. This is dumb,’ before saying: ‘MADE IT. Only 1h45 in a queue that could have been completely avoided with proper staffing.’
Another wrote: ‘So many people – including elderly and young children waiting for the border police to check their documents…. why there not more officers here?
‘Totally unacceptable for an airport like Heathrow. This is so late now, hope to catch the last train.’
It is not clear why the e-gates were shut last night. However, Channel 4 presenter Krishnan Guru-Murthy last night tweeted that a Border Force officer had told him that the new gates had not been updated to reflect new travel rules brought in as part of ‘Freedom Day’.
MailOnline has contacted the Border Force, via the Home Office, and Heathrow Airport for comment.
Heathrow last night, responding to another Twitter user who had complained about the queues, saying that they were ‘working with Border Force to reduce queuing times’.
It comes as the Government yesterday eased travel restrictions by dropping the requirement for double-jabbed passengers arriving in the UK from amber-list countries.
As of 4am, passengers from Amber List countries will no longer have to undertake an up-to-day 10-day home quarantine.
The rule does not apply to Amber List France, which was put on what is being dubbed the ‘Amber Plus’ list due to rising cases of the Beta (South African) variant.
The rules were last night branded ‘excessive’ by a French minister Clement Beaune, who told French channel BFM TV: ‘It seems to us that the measures taken by the UK are not entirely based on scientific foundations.’
Meanwhile, the Balearic islands were also moved from the UK’s quarantine free Green List to the Amber List.
The sudden move – which came just weeks after the Balearics were moved on to the Green List – sparked unvaccinated Britons holidaying in the likes of Mallorca and Ibiza to make a mad dash for the airports in order to make it back to the UK before the rule change.
Bulgaria and Croatia went the other way, going from amber to green, along with Taiwan and Hong Kong.
However Bulgaria has since banned UK holidaymakers by adding Britain to its ‘red zone’ list – which means only essential journeys can be made.