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British Airways restores 'many' of its IT systems after planes grounded

British Airways says "many" of its IT systems are up and running, but travellers still face cancellations and delays after a global computer failure grounded hundreds of flights.

Airline promising to rebook or give refunds to tens of thousand of travellers who were stranded

A traveller sleeps next to luggage at Heathrow Airport Terminal 5 after British Airways flights were cancelled at Heathrow Airport in west London. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images)

British Airways says "many" of its IT systems are up and running, but travellers still face cancellations and delays after a global computer failure grounded hundreds of flights.

BA chief executive Alex Cruz says the airline is running a "near-full operation" at London's Gatwick Airport and plans to run all scheduled long-haul services from Heathrow on Sunday. But he says there will still be delays, as well as some cancelled short-haul flights.

Passengers still face hours-long lines to check in, reclaim lost luggage or rebook flights at Terminal 5, BA's hub at Heathrow. Cruz says to reduce overcrowding travellers will only be let into the terminal 90 minutes before their flights.

In a video statement, Cruz apologized, saying "I know this has been a horrible time for customers."

"Work continues to restore all of our IT systems but we expect some further disruption today," BA said in a statement.

British Airways announced on Saturday that it had cancelled all its flights out of major London airports Heathrow and Gatwick after an IT systems failure. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images)

BA cancelled all flights from both airports Saturday, upending the travel plans of tens of thousands of people on a busy U.K. holiday weekend. It blamed a power supply issue for the outage and said there was no sign it was under cyberattack.

BA operates hundreds of flights from Heathrow and Gatwick on a typical day — and both are major hubs for worldwide travel.

On Saturday, passengers at Heathrow and Gatwick faced long lines at check-in counters and the failure of both the airline's website and its mobile app. BA said the crash also affected its call centres.

Many passengers complained about a lack of information from the airline.

"Some 80-year-old lady was standing around waiting for announcements, et cetera, and she fell over," said Londoner Terry Page, who managed to get on one of the last flights from Heathrow to Dallas-Fort Worth Saturday. He and other passengers arrived, but their luggage did not.

'A terrible, terrible day'

"We helped her up and she said 'I'm just so tired,"' Page said. "It's been a terrible, terrible day."

The airline said it would refund or rebook customers affected by the IT failure.

While not that frequent, when airline outages do happen, the effects are widespread, high-profile and can hit travellers across the globe.

BA passengers were hit with severe delays in July and September 2016 because of problems with the airline's online check-in systems.

In August 2016, Delta planes around the world were grounded when an electrical component failed and led to a shutdown of the transformer that provides power to the airline's data centre. Delta said it lost $100 million in revenue as a result of the outage.

Flights resuming to and from Toronto airport

Erin Kennedy, spokesperson for the Greater Toronto Airports Authority at Toronto's Pearson Airport, said there are two British Airways flights scheduled to arrive and two scheduled to depart from Pearson on Sunday. She said the GTAA expects the flights will proceed.

However, the GTAA is advising passengers to check with the airline before travelling to the airport.

Two British Airways flights scheduled to leave Pearson on Saturday were cancelled.

The first British Airways flight, now that airline computers are being restored, arrives mid-afternoon on Sunday, she said.