Fewer unruly airline passengers

The number of unruly airline passengers seems to have dropped quite dramatically at Thomas Cook Airlines after the company introduced new rules enabling it to force disruptive passengers to find their own way home from destinations.
The number of unruly airline passengers seems to have dropped quite dramatically at Thomas Cook Airlines after the company introduced new rules enabling it to force disruptive passengers to find their own way home from destinations.
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New rules which require unruly passengers to find their own transport home from holiday destinations have greatly reduced the number of airborne episodes involving drunken and disruptive passengers.

In the year 2000, Thomas Cook Airlines, which transports some two million passengers each year, reported 58 Scandinavians - 49 men and nine women - as having behaved in a violent or threatening way, most often in connection with alcohol.

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