also from ananova.com. .. . </font><blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">Ryanair defends itself over Holiday Which? complaints . .. .Ryanair is defending itself from complaints from Holiday Which? magazine.. .. .The Consumers Association magazine claims the budget airline uses airports that are often miles away from the cities it says it serves.. .. .But Ryanair's marketing director Tim Jeans has dismissed the Holiday Which? report as "a piece of very poorly researched nonsense".. .. .Holiday Which? says passengers flying to Bologna's Forli airport actually land in a little town 37 miles from the city, while those flying with Ryanair to the Danish capital of Copenhagen actually land at Malmo in Sweden.. .. .Mr Jeans says: "We don't advertise flights to Copenhagen - we fly to Malmo. As for Bologna, we carry more passengers on this route than either British Airways or Go, who both use the other Bologna airport.. .. ."We have not had a single complaint about our Bologna service and we work very closely with the Advertising Standards Authority in formulating our adverts.". .. .The Consumers' Association says it will write to the ASA with its own complaints about Ryanair.. .. .Holiday Which states: "No-frills airline Ryanair makes a song and dance about its bargain fares on certain routes.. .. ."But it is not so outspoken about a smoke-and-mirrors technique it uses to keep prices down. What its eye-catching adverts don't always make clear is that Ryanair - more than other no-frills airlines - uses airports that are often miles away from the cities they claim to serve.". .. .Go has been running adverts pointing out that it flies to the major airports of cities, while Ryanair 'misleads' people about where it flies to. The Irish-based airline complained to the ASA, which rejected two complaints but upheld a third concerning suggestions that Ryanair tried to hide the airport tax passengers paid.</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">