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Stranded travellers endure travel chaos in hand-washed underwear and fake Adidas

Stranded travellers exchange tips about where to find underwear in the lobby of an old hotel near Doha Airport. They wear identical fake Adidas t-shirts purchased from a nearby shop.

Erika Macikova said, "It is our uniform." She was stranded after returning from an ayurvedic resort in Sri Lanka. Her luggage is still at the airport but she and hundreds of other passengers were evacuated together to a hotel.

Macikova, who had no spare clothing, began to share the names of open shops with other globetrotters. After escalating conflicts between the U.S. and Israel, Macikova and other travellers in the Middle East entered limbo for a third consecutive day.

The biggest change in global air travel since COVID-19

Macikova was one of many stuck in the area who were just changing planes. Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi and other nearby cities handle more than 1,000 flights per day. They are at the intersection of east-west travel and funnel long-haul traffic from Europe to Asia via tightly-scheduled connecting flights.

Tens of thousands of passengers are stranded all over the world, including in Bali, Kathmandu, and Frankfurt. The UAE civil aviation authority reported that it helped about 20,200 travelers on Saturday. At least 4,000 cancelled flights occurred in just three days, according to data.

James Gaskin, a resident of?Dubai spent the morning of Monday washing his underwear in his bathroom sink. He also had a bunch of novelty socks.

The 53-year old procurement manager, originally from England's north, was already out of clean clothes after a week spent in India on business when his connecting flight back to Britain was canceled. The 53-year-old procurement manager from northern England was already short of clean clothes when his connecting flight back to Britain was cancelled.

Gaskin, like many others, said that he was unaware of the events unfolding at Dubai Airport when he arrived.

"A lady came up to the gate, stood on a chair, and announced that everyone had to leave the airport. "All very calm and ordered," he said. "In the British way, six hours of queueing went by without any drama."

He said that the baggage hall was a mess as people pulled their bags off of carousels to find theirs.

He said, "Even though there was chaos, I was quite relaxed."

He said that "there was quite a bit of banging, and the airport was hit". "That brought it all home."

The general feeling is that the longer the situation continues, the more edgy the people become.

Passengers can share tips via WhatsApp.

Strangers in hotels across the region exchange information about where to find a washing machine, how to use airline helplines, or retrieve luggage. They also discuss whether it is better to pool resources to try and leave by car.

In the lobby of hotels, they play games and watch sports. They also go to shopping malls for snacks. Whatsapp groups have been formed.

Many people are trying to not dwell on their situation even when loud bangs overhead reminds them of why they're stuck. Macikova spent as much time inside the hotel as she could because she felt safe there.

Gaskin, on the other hand, was bored. She was engrossed in a romance novel. He had received logins for various streaming services from his wife, but had not wanted to watch them.

The British friends, Julie Hardy and Francis McKay who were on a 2-week tour in southern India, stayed at the same hotel.

They took a taxi on?Sunday to the mall nearby to buy cheese, crackers and medication.

They said it was fun. The nights are more difficult. Hardy's mobile phone rang twice on Saturday night and she hurried to the hotel in her nightie.

She said, "I don't want to sleep up here." I would prefer to stay downstairs as long as I could. I can't rest because I fear something will happen during the night. I'll have to evacuate quickly.

McKay, too, was worried. She even feared that she might not see her family ever again.

It's an unknown and I have never been to a warzone. (Reporting from Lucy Craymer, in Dubai, and Justyna Pawelak; Editing and production by Josephine Mason and Kevin Liffey.

(source: Reuters)