Cathay Pacific makes second first class blunder in two weeks | Inquirer News

Cathay Pacific makes second first class blunder in two weeks

/ 02:33 PM January 14, 2019

Cathay Pacific makes second first class blunder in two weeks

AFP FILE PHOTO

HONG KONG — For a lucky few, it’s the gift that keeps on giving: a Cathay Pacific snafu offering premium tickets at a fraction of their value, for the second time in less than two weeks.

On its website Sunday morning, Cathay was offering first-class flights from Lisbon to Hong Kong — via a connecting flight through London with a partner airline — for just $1,512, the South China Morning Post reported.

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A similar journey in first-class via Frankfurt meanwhile, would set travelers back an eye-watering $16,000.

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“We are looking into the root cause of this incident both internally and externally with our vendors,” a Cathay spokesperson, who attributed the error to an “input issue”, was cited as saying.

The Hong Kong-based carrier will honor the cheap fares for the “very small number” of savvy and fortunate travelers, the spokesperson added, as it did last time.

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Cathay did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment.

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Airline and travel blogs went into overdrive on New Year’s Eve after eagle-eyed shoppers noticed the carrier was offering first and business class tickets on its website from Vietnam to the United States and Canada for as little as $670.

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That represented a staggering discount from the usual $16,000 round trip flight on first class, and $4-6,000 on business class.

It took two days for Cathay to publicly acknowledge the error, and a spokesperson declined to say how many tickets were sold at the discounted price.

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Cathay had a tough year in 2018. It continued to struggle with the rise of cheaper mainland Chinese rivals, losing $33 million in the first six months of the year.

Then in October it sparked outrage among customers and politicians in Hong Kong when it admitted to a massive data breach five months after hackers made off with the data of 9.4 million customers, including some passport numbers and credit card details.

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TAGS: Asia, Aviation, Plane Tickets

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