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Delta shutdown strands 1,000-plus at Narita airport in Japan

Click to play video: 'Delta Airlines computer outage causes massive flight delays worldwide'
Delta Airlines computer outage causes massive flight delays worldwide
WATCH ABOVE: Delta Airlines computer outage causes massive flight delays worldwide – Aug 8, 2016

TOKYO – More than 1,000 people spent the night at Narita airport outside Tokyo because of the computer shutdown that halted Delta Air Lines flights worldwide.

Flights were resuming Tuesday morning at Narita, but Delta spokeswoman Hiroko Okada said some more delays were expected.

“What a nightmare,” said American Jeff Quigley, who managed two hours of sleep at the airport after his Monday afternoon flight to Manila was delayed until the next morning. “I fly four to eight times a month, and this is the worst thing I’ve experienced so far.”

WATCH: Delta flights resume after worldwide system outage

Click to play video: 'Delta flights resume after worldwide system outage'
Delta flights resume after worldwide system outage

Narita is the Asia-Pacific hub for Delta and several other U.S. airlines, so multiple flights arrive from the U.S. and then fan out to destinations in much of Asia.

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The shutdown, triggered by a power outage at a Delta facility in the U.S., stranded many passengers in Japan. Six flights were cancelled, affecting 1,733 travellers, Okada said. Another 15 flights were delayed. The shutdown happened Monday afternoon, so many of the delays stretched overnight, forcing many more to find a place to sleep

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Katsuaki Tomimura, a spokesman at Narita airport, said more than 1,000 stayed overnight in an arrival lobby at the airport.

The cancelled flights were two to Honolulu, and one each to New York, Minneapolis, Los Angeles and Atlanta.

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