and had to be pushed through parliament by President Emmanuel Macron without a vote.
Prices for hospitality tickets and accommodation packages offered by the company ranged from £10,000 up to £16,500.The BBC has approached Yurtel for comment. Glastonbury Festival said while it was "disappointing" for those who had booked through the company, it has "no involvement with the operation of Yurtel".
The cheapest package offered by Yurtel was £10,000 for a deluxe bell tent with options ranging up to £16,500 for a presidential suite, which featured a front deck with seating, a king sized bed and a sofa.In an email to customers, the company said it ceased trading due to insolvency and would commence formal liquidation shortly.It said that accommodation booked with Yurtel would not be available and advised people to book with another provider.
It added that money customers had paid "cannot be refunded" and advised that details of the claim process would be provided to creditors when liquidation has started.Lydia, who paid £10,000 plus vat for tickets and accommodation for two via bank transfer, said she was "absolutely gutted".
She claimed the company did not allow customers to book via credit card.
"I tried to get it [tickets] through the normal Glastonbury route and wasn't successful and then booked quite soon after that," she said.It is only through the eyes of a mother who sees her children trapped, frightened and hungry from a safe distance, that it is possible to imagine why anyone would want to go back to Gaza.
Sometimes in war it is the smallest sound that can make the loudest statement.In Gaza's Nasser hospital, a five-month-old girl struggles to cry.
Siwar Ashour is hoarse. Her voice has been robbed of the energy to fully communicate her distress. She cannot absorb regular formula milk and doctors say the Israeli blockadenow in its third month means supplies of the food she needs are scarce.