European airports are still suffering disruption after the cyber-attack on Friday with a significant number of flights being cancelled and delayed, plunging passengers into more travel chaos.
Brussels Airport in Belgium has taken the drastic step of asking its airlines to cancel almost half of their departures on Monday, with nearly 140 of their 276 scheduled outbound flights scrapped.
Meanwhile, airports in Berlin and Dublin are still scrambling to return to normal after the crippling attack, with travellers warned to still expect significant delays.
Hackers caused chaos in some of Europe's biggest airports over the weekend after they targetted check-in and boarding systems provider Collins Aerospace, owned by RTX (RTX.N).
Hundreds of flights were cancelled and delayed after airports were forced into manually processing thousands of passengers, causing travel hell across Europe with families stuck in three-hour check-in queues.











