British tourist stranded in Malaga amid new EU travel rules
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A British traveler and her daughter found themselves stuck in Malaga after missing their flight due to recently implemented EU travel regulations. The woman reported feeling blamed by border officials for the disruption.

The chaos stems from new EU requirements mandating that travelers have their photos and fingerprints recorded when entering the Schengen zone, leading to significant confusion and delays for many passengers.

Scenes of frustration unfolded at Milan’s Linate Airport on Sunday, where approximately 100 easyJet passengers were left stranded while trying to board a flight to Manchester.

This disruption has not been isolated, with reports of delays, canceled flights, and abandoned travelers surfacing in airports from Brussels and Geneva to Malta.

Michelle Maguire, 38, along with her daughter, was supposed to fly from Malaga to Liverpool on Saturday evening. However, due to the ensuing travel chaos, they only managed to return home 24 hours later, incurring additional expenses amounting to £1,000.

Despite their early arrival at the airport, checking in three hours before their flight and getting in the passport queue 90 minutes prior to departure, the new procedures thwarted their plans, leaving them scrambling to find a way back home.

With the line barely moving and time ticking, Ms Maguire desperately searched for anyone who could explain what was going on and even tried going straight up to one of the passport desks before bluntly being herded back into the line.

‘Everyone was in the same situation,’ she told the Daily Mail. ‘We were telling staff, “we’re going to miss our flight.”‘

Michelle Maguire pictured, left, with her friend on holiday before the pair - and their children - were abandoned in Malaga amid new EU travel rules

Michelle Maguire pictured, left, with her friend on holiday before the pair – and their children – were abandoned in Malaga amid new EU travel rules

Passengers left behind in Milan Linate airport on Sunday due to border control chaos

Passengers left behind in Milan Linate airport on Sunday due to border control chaos

They were greeted with an unequivocal response: ‘It’s not our problem. Get back in the queue.’ 

Ms Maguire painted the picture of a packed airport engulfed in bedlam with anxious travellers jostling for position and attempting to get through passport control via different entrances.

‘Everyone was panicking. Everyone was getting frustrated,’ she added. ‘Kids were crying.

‘There was no one attending the crowd which was making it worse. People were coming out and coming back in.’

Eventually, with around half an hour until her flight was due to leave for the UK, Ms Maguire made it to the border control desks where she discovered the full extent of staff incompetence which had been causing the hold-up.

The mother said: ‘It was really weird. We did the whole queue for over an hour and then when we could see the desks, it seemed like there was no rush. There was no urgency at all.’

Things were made worse by the fact that most booths were empty, an after-effect of the strikes which have gripped Spanish airports in recent weeks.

But those who were working at the border control desks had no great desire to make their way through the thousands of passports being waved at them, according to Ms Maguire.

‘No one cared if we made our flight,’ she added. ‘It was not a priority and there was definitely no empathy.’

The EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) is still in its infancy with Ms Maguire among the first wave of passengers subjected to the new checks.

She said: ‘It felt like that bit took ages, but I don’t even feel like they were doing it that thoroughly. 

‘They weren’t speaking or giving you any direction of where you need to stand, or whether to make your face clear.

‘It felt like in my picture there were loads of people in the background, pushing to get forward. It did not feel like a thorough check. It was just box-ticking.’

Once this excruciating process was over, she and her group raced to the gate and, to their relief, managed to make it with 20 minutes to spare.

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Should British travelers accept tougher EU border checks, or is it unfair treatment after Brexit?

The rollout of the EU's new Entry/Exit System (EES) continued to cause delays on Monday. Pictured are queues for passport control at Brussels Airport

The rollout of the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) continued to cause delays on Monday. Pictured are queues for passport control at Brussels Airport 

The Daily Mail understands easyJet delayed the flight by 52 minutes to allow customers extra time but the flight was forced to head off as crew approached their shift-limit time

The Daily Mail understands easyJet delayed the flight by 52 minutes to allow customers extra time but the flight was forced to head off as crew approached their shift-limit time

But the joy was short-lived. The official at the desk told her their flight was just about to depart and they could not join their fellow passengers on the plane.

‘The airline should have held it for as long as possible,’ she said. ‘They knew [what was going to happen].’

Ms Maguire was not the only victim of the chaos and has since lodged a joint complaint with four other families whose return home was blighted by the delays.

Some passengers were even separated from their family members, she claimed, as the full extent of the disarray was laid bare. 

What is the ESS?

The EU’s Entry/Exit System (ESS) involves people from third-party countries such as the UK having their fingerprints registered and photograph taken to enter the Schengen area, which consists of 29 European countries, mainly in the EU.

The automated EES system was first launched in October 2025, but airports and ports initially had until April 10 to fully implement the technology as a mandatory requirement.

EES will replace the current system of passports being stamped by a border officer. 

To register for EES for the first time, a photo of your face will be taken and your passport scanned. Adults and children aged 12 and over will also have their fingerprints scanned. 

British travellers do not have to do anything specific to prepare but are advised to arrive at airports earlier than usual to prepare for longer waits at passport control.  

While Ms Maguire accepts the main portion of blame lies at the door of the airport staff, she insisted the airlines must also take responsibility.

She said: ‘The Ryanair desk was heaving because they had over-filled the flight. When we got there, they said, “you need to sort out your own flight and we’re not helping you”.

‘No one at the desk was willing to help us. It was absolute mayhem.’

Many of those left stranded at Malaga Airport simply coughed up the cash and booked onto the next flight back to Liverpool.

But with tickets soaring beyond £500, this was not an option for Ms Maguire and she had no choice but to head to Glasgow the following morning, rent a car, and make the four-hour journey to Merseyside to collect her own vehicle – before driving back home to Halifax, West Yorkshire.

The marathon undertaking was made more painful by the sleepless night she endured following the stress of the evening’s events. 

In sharp contrast, her husband and son enjoyed an effortless journey back to Britain using their Irish passports.

Ms Maguire said: ‘There is definitely an issue with British passports. 

‘Are we getting punished for Brexit? I’m not sure. But it feels like there is an undertone that it’s your fault. 

For years, Ms Maguire has enjoyed visiting southern Spain every few months, but the nightmare experience – which set her back a day of her time as well as hundreds of pounds – has put her off visiting Europe entirely.

She said: ‘I travel to Malaga often, but it’s actually put me off. I don’t feel like I could do that again. 

‘We do lots of weekends away with the kids to different European cities. I would not do that right now. 

‘Seeing the kids worried and upset and crying. It’s not worth it, and it’s not worth the extra expense.

‘It’s not a problem going away any time soon’ she said. ‘It’s not just happening in Malaga, it’s happening all over Europe.

‘How early are we going to have to start going to the airport. Do you want to spend six hours there before you fly?’

New travel rules caused more disruption on Monday, with passengers waiting to have their passports checked at Brussels Airport and Schiphol in Amsterdam taking to social media to report delays of up to two hours.

One passenger in Amsterdam described ‘elderly people and parents with toddlers’ waiting in line for passport gates, ‘hardly any’ of which were open. The airport’s website confirmed there were ‘long delays’.

Around 100 easyJet customers were abandoned at Linate airport while waiting to board a flight to Manchester on Sunday

Around 100 easyJet customers were abandoned at Linate airport while waiting to board a flight to Manchester on Sunday

The new biometric Entry/Exit System machines at Malaga Airport in Spain

The new biometric Entry/Exit System machines at Malaga Airport in Spain

In heatwave-hit Milan, airline passengers were left vomiting and passing out after waiting for up to three hours on Sunday night.

Around 100 easyJet customers were abandoned at Linate airport while waiting to board the flight to Manchester after the crew decided to leave without them.

EasyJet said the situation was ‘outside of our control’ and issues with the EU’s new border scheme had caused the delays, adding that the hold-ups were ‘unacceptable’.

Aviation expert Sally Gethin said the rollout of EES ‘wasn’t going well’.

‘It’s proving a bumpy ride and a massive headache for travellers,’ she told the Daily Mail.

‘This is going to rumble on for a few weeks and even when it’s fully bedded down there could be some sporadic issues.

‘But you can expect that. There are always teething problems when new technology is rolled out.

‘When you bring into the mix all this bureaucracy and people having to implement it you’re always going to have issues. It’s also incredibly ambitious and across so many countries.’

Ms Gethin said many flyers were ‘confused’ about the scheme and believes the UK Government could have done more to educate them.

‘The UK Government has come in for criticism for not raising enough awareness,’ she said.

‘To the average person travelling it’s quite confusing. You’re going on holiday so will be a bit stressed already

‘You’re also having frequent flyers who thought they would only have to input their personal data once but are now having to do it multiple times.’

The Daily Mail understands that easyJet delayed last night’s flight from Milan by 52 minutes to allow customers extra time but, with the crew approaching the end of their safety-regulated working hours, the flight was forced to head off half empty.

The saga left customers scrambling for alternative means of getting home with some discovering they had missed their flight while still in the queue.

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