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Retail & Consumer

First payday for Thomas Cook staff since collapse

Cabin manager Blakey Jones, who has worked for Thomas Cook in Bristol for six years, said staff were unaware of the troubles plaguing the firm until last week

Blakey Jones (2nd right)who has worked for Thomas Cook in Bristol for six years, he has said staff were unaware of the troubles plaguing the firm until last week(Image: Blakey Jones/PA Wire)

Thomas Cook staff left in limbo are preparing to go without their wages on Monday - which should have been their payday - following the collapse of the travel giant.

Around 9,000 staff in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ were left jobless in the early hours of Monday morning after the business failed to secure a last-ditch rescue deal.

Cabin manager Blakey Jones, who has worked for Thomas Cook in Bristol for six years, said staff were unaware of the troubles plaguing the firm until last week.

"On Monday morning, we received an email to say they tried everything they could but the talks had failed, and that was all we got," the 36-year-old told the PA news agency.

"I don't think there's been a lot of real input from anybody to tell us what's going on. It was like, 'We couldn't come to an agreement, that's it, the end'.

"I think the general consensus was it would go into administration, we'd have a couple of months of cost-cutting while they had that extra time to try and find a buyer, and then Thomas Cook airlines would survive and we would carry on.

"Maybe it would be split up, maybe it would get sold off, who knew, but we all thought that it would survive.

"Nobody expected it to go under like this."