Hotel evictions, canceled honeymoons: Fallout from Thomas Cook collapse comes into focus

It was the oldest travel company in the world — a behemoth that ran its own hotels and flights, serving 19 million travelers every year and employing 21,000 people.

So when the Manchester, England, headquartered firm Thomas Cook collapsed on Monday after a last-ditch effort failed to resolve the billions in debt it had accumulated, hundreds of thousands of travelers worldwide were suddenly stranded, prompting an aviation regulator in the United Kingdom to scramble to get them home.

The United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority dubbed the hastily put-together plan “Operation Matterhorn” and said it was the largest peacetime repatriation effort in British history, a complex effort to return 150,000 Britons.

The global operation is relying on about 45 aircraft operated by at least six different airlines. A Civil Aviation Authority press officer cautioned Monday evening that the exact number of jets could not be confirmed because the situation was “constantly changing.”

source: nbcnews.com