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Airports in Ireland also impacted by cyber attack

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Sun, 21 Sept 2025, 8:36am
Travellers wait in terminal 4 at Heathrow Airport, west of London, after major European airports were hit by "cyber-related disruption". Photo / Justin Tallis, AFP
Travellers wait in terminal 4 at Heathrow Airport, west of London, after major European airports were hit by "cyber-related disruption". Photo / Justin Tallis, AFP

Airports in Ireland also impacted by cyber attack

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Sun, 21 Sept 2025, 8:36am

Major European airports including Brussels, Berlin and London鈥檚 Heathrow were on Saturday hit by a cyber attack on check-in systems that caused cancellations and long delays for thousands of passengers.

Dublin and Cork airports in Ireland were also affected, Dublin Airport said on X, adding that it was experiencing 鈥渕inor impacts鈥 from 鈥渁 Europe-wide software issue鈥.

According to aviation watchdog Eurocontrol, the airports were 鈥渞eporting disruptions in IT systems related to passenger handling鈥.

At least 10 flights were cancelled out of Brussels Airport and another 17 delayed by over an hour after the system was hit by a 鈥渃yber attack鈥 late on Friday (local time), the airport said.

鈥淲e have become aware of a cyber-related disruption to our MUSE software in select airports,鈥 airport service provider Collins Aerospace told AFP.

鈥淭he impact is limited to electronic customer check-in and baggage drop,鈥 added Collins Aerospace, which says it has a presence in 170 airports globally.

Brussels airport said the attack was still having a 鈥渓arge impact鈥 on flight schedules on Saturday.

鈥淚n terms of information, it鈥檚 really not good at all, people are waiting, people don鈥檛 know,鈥 Nancy Steiner, 53, told AFP while surveying the long queues of passengers at Brussels airport.

Airlines had been asked to cancel half their flights to and from Brussels between 4am GMT on Saturday and 2am GMT on Monday because of the attack, Eurocontrol said.

AFPTV reporters filmed large queues at Brussels as passengers anxiously monitored announcement boards showing many flight delays.

London鈥檚 Heathrow Airport 鈥 the busiest in Europe 鈥 said its check-in and boarding systems, also provided by Collins Aerospace, were hit by a 鈥渢echnical issue鈥 that 鈥渕ay cause delays for departing passengers鈥.

鈥楺ueues not moving鈥

鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 tell us anything. It鈥檚 always crowded here, but today is like extra,鈥 said a 41-year-old architect waiting in Heathrow, who gave her first name as Rowan.

鈥淚f the system is down they should delay the flight. That鈥檚 what I鈥檓 hoping,鈥 she added, waiting in the packed check-in area at Heathrow鈥檚 Terminal 4 for a Saudia Airlines flight to Jeddah.

Another woman waiting for an Air Algerie flight to Algeria said she had been queueing for more than an hour to check in.

鈥淭hey said they鈥檙e doing everything manually. That鈥檚 all they鈥檝e told us,鈥 said the 30-year-old, asking not to give her name.

Pranit Nevrekar, 32, dropping his parents off for the Jeddah flight, said: 鈥淲e鈥檝e been told there鈥檚 a disruption across Europe. So the check-in system isn鈥檛 working, they鈥檙e doing everything manually.鈥

The Berlin Airport website read that 鈥渄ue to a technical issue at a system provider operating across Europe, there are longer waiting times at check-in鈥.

Collins Aerospace said it was 鈥渁ctively working to resolve the issue and restore full functionality to our customers as quickly as possible鈥.

The aviation tech company, which specialises in digital and data processing services, is a subsidiary of the American aerospace and defence group RTX, formerly known as Raytheon.

Cyber attacks and tech outages have disrupted airports around the world in recent years, from Japan to Germany, as air travel increasingly relies on online, interconnected systems.

Aviation expert Anita Mendiratta, who is also a special adviser to the secretary general of UN tourism, told AFP it was difficult to know who was behind the attack.

But she stressed it was 鈥渁 disruption caused to a software not a specific airport鈥 and it was important to try to 鈥渃ontain the contagion鈥.

The aviation sector saw a 600% increase in cyberattacks from 2024 to 2025, according to a report by French aerospace company Thales released in June.

鈥淔rom airlines and airports to navigation systems and suppliers, every link in the chain is vulnerable to attack,鈥 the report warned, pointing out that the strategically and economically important sector had become a 鈥減rime target鈥 for cyberattacks.

- Agence France-Presse

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