<span style="color: #222222;">The first batch of&nbsp;1,50,000&nbsp;British tourists is being flown back home&nbsp;from destinations including Bulgaria, Cuba, Turkey and the United States&nbsp;after travel&nbsp;firm&nbsp;Thomas Cook collapsed yesterday. The United Kingdom's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) is co-ordinating the repatriation, the biggest in peacetime, after the tour operator ceased trading with immediate effect.</span><br />'' <br />'' <span style="color: #222222;">Thomas Cook's administration puts 22,000 jobs at risk worldwide, including 9,000 in the UK. The corporate&nbsp;bankruptcy left some 6,00,000 tourists stranded worldwide.&nbsp;Thomas Cook, whose roots go back to 1841, went bust after last-ditch talks to raise fresh funding failed. The British Government refused to fund a bailout of two hundred fifty million pound.&nbsp;</span><br />
News On AIR | September 24, 2019 9:18 AM
UK launches biggest peacetime operation after Thomas Cook collapse