Ferry firm forced to cancel and move journeys from Portsmouth over extra Brexit sailings
Unhappy passengers planning cross-Channel trips with Brittany Ferries were told their original sailings were no longer available.
Government handed the firm a contract to accommodate extra sailings to move critical goods, including medicine, if Britain crashes out the European Union on March 29.
The Le Havre to Portsmouth route has been affected.
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Hide AdOne customer took to Twitter and said: 'I'm unimpressed at this level of self-inflicted harm to put it mildly.'
The service operates from Portsmouth, Poole and Plymouth.
Around 10,000 customers across 5,000 bookings have been affected.
A spokesman from the firm told the BBC: ‘In most cases it's no change or a small change. But In some cases it can involve moving from an overnight sailing to a morning or afternoon sailing or vice versa.
‘We apologise in advance for any inconvenience that these changes may cause, but hope that the additional sailings will offer customers more choice.’
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Hide AdThe government had handed Brittany Ferries a £46.6m contract to add an extra 19 sailings between the UK and France.
Its website said: ‘The contract guarantees space on some of our ships and Channel routes for the delivery of critical goods post-Brexit, like medicines.’