Young couple wrongly accused of vaping banned from flying home

Non-smoker couple are banned from flight and forced to spend another £500 to get back from Lanzarote after Tui wrongly accused them of vaping on the flight out

  • The couple were forced to fork out £500 on new flights, transfers and luggage 

A young couple who have never smoked have told of their anger at being banned from a holiday flight – after being wrongly accused of vaping on board.

Lois Light, 27, and her partner Dexter were on a Tui flight to Lanzarote from Gatwick when two other rowdy passengers were caught vaping on the plane by cabin crew.

Lois and Dexter enjoyed a week-long, £1,500 break in the sunshine. But on the day of their flight home, their Tui rep called to say they were banned from boarding.

They were accused of having vaped on the outward flight and were told they had to book a separate flight with another airline to get back to London Gatwick.

They insisted Tui had it wrong, especially as the offending couple had both been female – but they still had to fork out £500 on new flights, transfers and luggage. 

Lois, a nurse from Norwich, Norfolk, said: ‘It ruined our holiday and has caused a huge amount of stress since.

‘It is shocking that a mistake like this can happen and Tui said there was nothing they could do to help and seemed to not believe us.’

Dexter (left) and Lois Light (right) won an apology from TUI after they were wrongly accused 

The couple received an email from Tui asserting that they had continued to vape on the flight

The couple, neither of whom smoke or vape, were told two hours before they were due to fly home on Sunday, July 9 that they had been banned from the flight.

The pair scrambled to resolve the situation and protest their innocence but to no avail and were forced to find another flight home.

It left the holidaymakers having to fork out nearly £500 to get an Easyjet flight back to the UK seven hours later.

After arriving back in Norwich, complaints to the holiday company also failed to resolve the situation, with Tui saying they stand by their decision.

They continued to accuse the couple of having vaped and bad behaviour despite their repeated explanations they’d got the wrong people.

Lois, said: ‘We tried saying there was a mix-up but initially, everyone we spoke to said there was nothing they could do.

‘You’d think they would be able to look at the CCTV on the plane or see we did not match the description from staff.

‘I was even asleep at the time with headphones on so I didn’t even know it had happened.’

After posting about their ordeal on Facebook, Lois finally got an apology from Tui.

The package holiday company has since accepted liability, offered the couple compensation for the ordeal and has paid for the cost of their travel.

But Lois says their offer has fallen short, and she expects more from Tui.

She said: ‘They’ve paid our expenses and offered £500 compensation each – but that’s not enough.

‘It’s not like the air con was broken in our hotel, or the food made us ill – they’ve wrongly accused us of something which is a horrible feeling.

‘The whole experience was extremely upsetting.’

They said the ‘whole experience was extremely upsetting’ – and won an apology from Tui

Tui told the couple that there was no right of appeal and the decision in the matter was final

A Tui spokesperson, said: ‘We are sincerely sorry for the ordeal they experienced on their journey home from Lanzarote.

‘Unfortunately, a human error meant that the couple were falsely identified as disruptive passengers following their flight.

‘We have since apologised to the couple and offered them compensation and have paid for the travel costs as well as offering them a goodwill gesture.

‘Instances like this are extremely rare, and we take security matters very seriously.

‘We can only continue to apologise for this error, and we hope that the couple were still able to enjoy their holiday before this unfortunate mix up.’

Dexter has asked for his name and age to be withheld.

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