Travel agents in Oxford are still waiting to see if the bomb attack in Bali will affect trade.

A nightclub on the Pacific island was destroyed by a car bomb on Saturday, October 12, claiming the lives of at least 190 people, including 33 Britons.

A spokesman for Lunn Poly, which has offices in Oxford's Westgate Centre and at Templars Square, Cowley, said both they, and tour operators in charge of clients' holidays to Bali, would follow Foreign Office advice.

She said: "We have contacted the tour operators offering holidays to Bali to determine the situation for our customers travelling with them.

"People who are on holiday in Bali with British travel companies are being given the option to return home early, and anyone due to travel before next Monday can amend or cancel their travel plans free of charge.

"The tour operators will be regularly reviewing their position over the next few days. If anyone is due to travel, they should contact their travel agent."

Phil Edwards, press officer for Co-op Travel, which operates from Banbury Road in Oxford, said Bali was normally seen as a 'stop-over destination', with few people booking holidays there.

He said: "Operators are offering people the opportunity to either cancel and get a refund, or choose a different location."

Former Oxfordshire man Tom Holmes, 39, is still missing following the bomb attack. The former St Hugh's Preparatory School pupil, who grew up in the Faringdon area, moved to Hong Kong seven years ago.

Mr Holmes was in Bali for a rugby tournament.