Carbel Haddad will fly to Lebanon on Wednesday with her family and has been in the queue since five o'clock on Saturday morning.

He is frustrated that nothing seems to be done to make it easier for those who come to the airport and who are forced to queue despite having applied for a passport long before.

- Something needs to be done because as it looks now, it only looks to get worse, he says.

- I think it's a failure.

You see this and no one takes responsibility for it.

"Absolutely absurd"

Hanna Walander is going on a plane to France on Wednesday morning and hopes that the situation will be resolved by then for her part. 

- It's my daughter who will have a passport.

We applied four weeks ago, but it has not arrived.

That's why I decided to sit here because it's the only chance, she says.

She hopes to get her passport before Tuesday night and now plans to sleep outside the airport so as not to lose her queue.

- Sleeping bag comes a little later today, she says.

What do you think about this situation?

- What to say, it is completely absurd.

It is strange that it happens like this in Sweden today.

"Hope for the best"

Despite the queues being somewhat shorter inside the airport on Saturday afternoon, many people move inside the building.

Travelers who are going to travel today are, like those who are standing in the queue outside, out in good time.

Sara Wernerson is on site with her daughters six hours before the flight to Croatia departs.

What are you going to have fun with in the meantime?

- We have loaded up with crafts, books and games.

We get to have fun - eat and have coffee, she says.

Although she thinks the situation is somewhat worrying, she just likes the situation, she says.

- We have to queue and hope for the best. 

Hear more from Carbel Haddad and Hanna Walander in the clip above.