By Thomas Mackintosh, Oliver Slow & Rachel Russell
BBC News
British tourists continue to cut short their holidays as fires burn on the Greek island of Rhodes.
Repatriation flights landed in the UK on Monday night with more flights leaving Greece throughout Tuesday.
The Foreign Office updated its guidance, telling people travelling to the areas affected to make sure they have “appropriate insurance”.
The Liberal Democrats have urged ministers to advise against going to Rhodes to aid travel insurance claims.
Jet2 has nine flights scheduled to depart Rhodes on Tuesday, some of which have spare seats to accommodate extra passengers trying to leave the island.
Easyjet said extra seats are available on Wednesday’s flights.
Earlier, one of the airline’s pilots flying British tourists to Rhodes urged passengers at Gatwick to get off the plane before take-off.
“I don’t know in what capacity you are travelling, but if you are travelling for leisure, my sincere recommendation is that it’s a bad idea,” the pilot told passengers on board.
BBC Wales correspondent Gwyn Loader, who was travelling to Rhodes to report on the wildfires, said eight passengers took the pilot up on the offer, including one young boy in tears.
On Monday morning, Foreign Office Minister Andrew Mitchell said up to 10,000 Brits were on Rhodes in total – this number includes tourists in unaffected parts of the island.
Jet2 – which ran repatriation flights to Manchester, Leeds-Bradford, Glasgow and Stansted overnight – said “approximately 1,000 customers” had either been flown back to the UK or had been moved to hotels in unaffected areas.
EasyJet and Tui have cancelled outbound package holidays to Rhodes until Saturday and Friday respectively.
Instead of formally advising holidaymakers not to travel to the affected Greek islands, the Foreign Office said people should check with their hotel and travel operator, and explained how to sign up for emergency alerts.
Earlier, Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said he is still planning on going holiday to Greece next week. He told Sky News he was going to Evia, one of the islands that has issued an evacuation order.
He told BBC Breakfast that Greece was “safe” and a “wonderful place for those fortunate enough to go abroad to spend some time this summer”.
But the government’s advice was criticised in the House of Lords by Labour’s Baroness Angela Smith, who urged the government to “rethink” its guidance.
Liberal Democrats foreign affairs spokeswoman Layla Moran called for a change in travel advice as she said it would “enable the thousands of British tourists due to fly to Rhodes to safely cancel their holidays without being left out of pocket”.
Marc Bolland, editor of Which? magazine, said many travellers would not be able to claim a refund using travel insurance without a formal government travel warning.
“There will be some cover, but it won’t be great,” Mr Boland warned. “Insurance won’t, as a rule, make allowances for ‘disinclination to travel’.”
Train operator London North Eastern Railway (LNER) is offering free travel to holidaymakers returning from Rhodes and Corfu.
It said standard travel along the east coast route would come at no cost for anyone who landed at a different airport from their home location or had to travel on a different day.
Customers should present their stamped passport and airline boarding card confirming travel from the islands within the previous 24 hours to use the service between 25 July and 7 August.
Coach company National Express is offering free travel too for those who arrive at a different UK airport than they flew out from.
In an update, fire brigade deputy chief Ioannis Artophios said the most serious fires were developing in Rhodes and in Corfu. Crete – the largest of the Greek Islands – has been put on high alert because of an extreme risk of fire.
On Tuesday afternoon, two Greek air force pilots died after a water-bombing plane crashed on the island of Evia while fighting wildfires.
They were named as 34-year-old Cdr Christos Moulas and his co-pilot, 27-year-old Pericles Stefanidis.
In the last week more than 35,000 hectares (86,500 acres) of forest and other land have been scorched by fire in Greece, the World Wildlife Fund for Nature said.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told his cabinet the next three days “will be difficult” but he hoped conditions will ease from Friday.
“Let me state the obvious,” he said. “That in the face of what the entire planet is facing, especially the Mediterranean, which is a hotspot for climate change, there is no magic defence.
“If there was, obviously we would have implemented it.”
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