'I had to collect my daughter's passport in Hungary - the compo left me raging'

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Attila Cseke, pictured with his family, fumed at the offer from Royal Mail (Image: Attila Cseke / SWNS)
Attila Cseke, pictured with his family, fumed at the offer from Royal Mail (Image: Attila Cseke / SWNS)

A dad forced to fly to Hungary at a cost of £300 to collect a passport following a postal delay was left raging when he was offered a measly eight stamps in compensation.

Dad Attila Cseke, from St Andrews, Scotland, cancelled his daughter Liah's passport when it hadn't arrived ten days after his son Mate's - despite both being posted on the same day. The 50-year-old applied for a new passport but was worried it wouldn't reach their home in time for their holiday three weeks later - so he spent £300 on an overnight trip to Hungary to collect the document.

On his return Attila, who is originally from Hungary, asked Royal Mail for compensation. However, he was left raging when he received a book of eight first-class stamps by way of an apology.

'I had to collect my daughter's passport in Hungary - the compo left me raging' eiqehiqkridetinvThe book of stamps received with an apology note from Royal Mail (Attila Cseke / SWNS)
'I had to collect my daughter's passport in Hungary - the compo left me raging'Attila Cseke had paid £300 for the trip to Hungary to collect a passport (Attila Cseke / SWNS)

Attila told the Daily Record : "They are just not considering the human element of this at all. The whole thing was very distressing. It was shocking to see how a big company can approach a situation like this.

"I've worked in hospitality for years - it's really important to remember you're dealing with a person, not just a case number. They said they'd followed the process, but I feel this just ridicules the customer."

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Attila sent off passport application forms for Mate, 17, and Liah, 14, in early May. The dad, the kids, and his wife Anita, 50, were flying to Gran Canaria on July 12 for a holiday celebration of their 50th birthdays and 15th wedding anniversary.

The children's Hungarian passports needed renewing, so Attila applied through the Hungarian consulate and the travel documents were sent to an authority in Hungary before being posted to the UK.

They were posted to the family from an office in Edinburgh via the second-class-signed-for service on June 7. Mate's arrived two days later, but there was no sign of Liah's.

Attila made calls to Royal Mail and the Hungarian Consulate on June 12, but he said the passport couldn't be traced. He cancelled the passport, presuming it was lost, on June 19, and made a new application.

To his dismay the now cancelled and invalid document arrived at the family home on June 20. Convinced the new passport wouldn't arrive in time for the trip, he took time off work and paid £300 to travel to Hungary to collect it, on July 4.

He added: "We were in a very bad situation. No-one could see where the passport was. The consulate said to cancel the passport and apply again, and said it would be quicker to collect it from Hungary.

"It was a difficult decision but felt like the only thing to do. It was an immense relief to get the passport but the stress, expense and time involved really hit us as a family."

A Royal Mail spokesperson said: "We are sorry for the inconvenience the delay in the delivery of the passport undoubtedly caused the customer. Their complaint was escalated to the Postal Review Panel which re-assessed the facts of the complaint and decided on the due compensation. The customer has been provided with further details to appeal this decision."

Kate Pounds

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