British Airways has trialled not cleaning toilets, bins and cabins on flights between London and Dublin
The airline ran its 'no clean' trial on busy flights from Heathrow to Dublin up to last Friday
BRITISH Airways has trialled not cleaning jet cabins between flights.
Passengers faced rubbish-filled seat pockets, dirty toilets and unemptied bins, sources said.
Airline bosses suggested: “Please offer the customer your apologies and explain the cabin has not been cleaned . . . to assist the punctuality of our operation.”
BA ran its “no clean” trial on busy flights from Heathrow to Dublin up to last Friday. Cabin crew were encouraged to collect as much rubbish as possible before landing.
But furious union officials insisted staff did not help replace cleaners.
They fear the trial will lead to crew having to clean the aircraft.
They also believe the move “weakens security” as a trawl by cleaners through the cabin is an extra safety sweep.
One said: “Cleaners find all sorts of things.”
In 2017, The Sun told how BA bosses let planes take off with just a “light clean” and toilet waste tanks unemptied.
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