Deborah O’Donoghue is a reporter at Travel Tomorrow. This British-Irish writer lived in the UK and France before moving to Belgium. She has travelled all over the world and worked in car body repairs, in the best fish ‘n’ chip shop in Brighton, and been a gopher in a comedy club, as well as a teacher. She’s a past winner of the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association Short Story Prize. Her début novel, Sea of Bones, was published by the UK's Legend Press in 2019 and Droemer Knaur Germany in 2021.
Two blind passengers have been forced off a Hong Kong flight after crew decided they were a safety liability, disability advocates have said. The two men, […]
Another Boeing aircraft has lost a part mid-air, in the latest of a series of catastrophic and deadly incidents that have seen the aviation giant accused of […]
As the US emerges from another Independence Day holiday, the country’s aviation sector is welcoming some good news at last, with the latest Department of Transportation […]
A new report from the European Travel Commission (ETC), confirms a majority of Europeans planning to vacation in the second half of 2024, with demand strongest among […]
The 2024 Best Airport Awards, announced at a gala dinner in Istanbul on 4 July, saw host Türkiye take one of aviation’s top accolades, alongside plaudits […]
After a volcanic eruption from Sicily’s Mount Etna closed airspace over the Italian island this weekend, causing disruption for thousands of air passengers, local airport Catania […]
An ongoing border dispute between China and India is preventing the resumption of direct flights between the two countries, four years after the last route was […]
Frequent flyer schemes operated by airlines are driving climate change, a charity has said, amid calls for the reward programmes to be immediately scrapped. 34 times […]
The scientist behind the term “Ultra-processed foods” (UPFs) has called for tobacco-style warnings to alert consumers to the dangers, 15 years after the label was first […]
A British Airways (BA) commercial aircraft flew hundreds of passengers for 11-hours but took them nowhere on 29 June, ending up back at its original point […]