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You're listening to the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Oliver Conway.
We are recording this at 14 hours GMT on Friday 21st March.
Europe's busiest airport, Heathrow, is shut for the entire day, causing travel chaos around the world.
After nearly two years of civil war in Sudan, the army recaptures the Presidential palace in Khartoum and the former boss of Abercrombie and Fitch is accused of abuse by 40 men.
Also in the podcast, there's only been three made.
So incredibly rare, I think that with commission it will exceed a million dollars.
ET goes under the hammer.
Every day, around 230,000 passengers travel through Heathrow in West London, making it the busiest airport in Europe.
But today its runways are quiet with no planes coming or going.
After a big fire knocked out the electricity supply nearby.
More than 1,300 flights are affected and aviation consultant John Strickland says it could be some time before services return to normal.
The way this is going to play out is really a small version of what we saw with the 911 terror attacks way back more than 20 years ago.
And while that was a much more widespread challenge, the Heathrow is exactly the.
Same because the air airport being closed entirely means many, many long haul flights.
Were already on their way to Heathrow and there will be frantic efforts by airline staff to get other aircraft on route diverted to other places.
Lucy Adler is stuck at Delhi Airport, back where she started after nine hours in the air.
So I was on a 5am flight out of Delhi which was supposed to land at Heathrow for sort of 10:00am and literally exactly halfway through, Captain woke us all up and kind of said he, there's been a problem, there's been a fire at Heathrow and actually, you know, we're going to need to.
And we all thought he was going to say land at a different airport and what he actually said was turn around and go back to Delhi.