Capacity at Rome's Fiumicino airport will gradually be reduced to 60 per cent from Saturday as "a precautionary measure" after the May fire forced the closure of the security gates in terminal three, which handles international flights.
Passengers have been checking in for flights at other terminals but the increase in traffic is putting a strain on the system, the ENAC aurthority said.
Air France-KLM, one of the airlines which flies in and out of terminal three, told AFP today that it would be cancelling some flights -- but added it hoped to accommodate affected passengers by using larger long-haul aircraft.
Rome's main airport was thrown into chaos at the start of May after a blaze triggered by an electrical fault in a bar broke out in terminal three.
It took more than five hours to bring the overnight fire fully under control, by which point it had devastated a shopping area with a string of upmarket boutiques.
Staff working near the affected area have been ordered to wear air pollution masks and have seen their shifts cut to a maximum of four hours.
