An airline on which passengers claimed they were forced to pay for refuelling has cancelled next weekend's services in and out of the UK.
The move by Austrian-registered Comtel Air comes as some passengers are still stranded abroad, while others are trying to get their money back after being "held to ransom" on the tarmac at Vienna airport earlier this week.
One passenger said people agreed to pay for fuel so they could fly to Birmingham and added: "We all got together, took our money out of purses.
"The children under two went free.
"If we didn't have the money they were making us go one by one outside in Vienna to get the cash out."
Only one of the two Comtel flights from the Indian city of Amritsar to Birmingham via Vienna took off last weekend.
With passengers stuck in Amritsar, those that did take off said they had to raise £20,000 (€23,323) to fund the rest of the trip from Vienna to Birmingham.
They were stuck at Vienna for six hours and the flight that should have got back to Birmingham on Saturday only arrived on Tuesday morning.
A Birmingham airport spokeswoman said today that Comtel had told the airport that this weekend's Birmingham-Amritsar return flights via Vienna had been cancelled.
"They said we would know in the next couple of days about flights after that," the spokeswoman added.
Comtel Air's director of passenger services Bhunpinder Kandra said: "I have heard what happened, it shouldn't have happened, and I will investigate why it happened.
"The people who had to pay the money will receive a refund."
Asked if the company was going bust, he said: "There is no chance of that. Comtel is a very strong company, 16 years in Vienna."
A spokesman for the British Civil Aviation Authority said: "It is an Austrian airline, so we have no direct jurisdiction over it.
"We are looking to see if people who bought their holiday in Britain bought it through an ATOL-licensed (Air Travel Organisers' Licensing) tour operator. If they did, that tour operator needs to step in to arrange new flights for them.
"If that makes the tour operator go bust, then we would step in to bring ATOL-protected people home."



















