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A senior citizen who was parted from his bags
after
a Ryanair flight to Dublin has successfully sued the
Irish discount carrier in Aberdeen’s small claims court.
The Irish discount airline has been ordered to
pay Maurice O’Carroll £750 for frustration and extra expenses incurred
after Ryanair lost the Aberdeen resident’s luggage.
O’Carroll noted that he only decided to take
Ryanair to court after the carrier responded to his request for
compensation by offering him a total of £7.50 in cash. In the small
claims submission, O’Carroll claimed £200 for his expenses and £500 for
stress and frustration and won his case. But Ryanair has already
indicated that it has every intention to submit an appeal in the coming
days.
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Cape Town - Is your business green, or
sustainable, or both? If you don’t know the difference - or care -
chances are your customers are starting to, and green may not be good
enough any more.
Green is getting a lot of attention these days, and not just if you’re
in rainy Cape Town.
In travel and tourism, carbon-offsets are
growing in popularity and availability, and water-wise initiatives in
hotels and guesthouses are becoming commonplace. Consumer and industry
demand for ‘green’ products and services is growing at a rate such that
it’s fast becoming the mainstream expectation.
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ORIGINAL Boats Company will
unveil South Africa’s
first private luxury motor yacht licensed to operate
from Cape Town to Robben Island Museum at an exclusive launch on
September 26.
The operation is the brainchild of
the youngest inmate incarcerated on Robben Island during the
anti-apartheid era, executive director Thabane Zulu.
“With current available choices limited to public ferries, we felt that
it was time to create our own private, luxurious experience,” says Zulu.
“Our aim is to plough back a portion of the revenue stream into the
museum’s efficiency and management,
thus maintaining its unique symbolism.” |