Passengers exchange blows
in moving airplane
By UCHE USIM
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
In what could be described as total absurdity, two passengers
threw decorum to the wind and exchanged blows as a Lagos-bound
Chanchangi aircraft was taxing to take-off from the Nnamdi
Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja.
The incident, which shook occupants of the aircraft to their
marrows occured on Tuesday afternoon at the Abuja airport
runway.
Daily Sun learnt that trouble started when the cabin crew
and the pilot announced as the aircraft was on the verge of
taxiing that all mobile phones be switched off as it is the
standard practice globally. Rather than obey, a passenger
was said to be engrossed in a phone call, totally ignoring
the safety instructions from the cockpit.
As he spoke wildly over the phone, a cabin crew member beckoned
on him to switch off as the electromagnetic emissions from
the phone interferes with aircraft navigational signals. Yet,
he ignored the instruction a second time.
Rather, what he did was to throw abusive words at the crew.
At this time, another passenger sitting close to him was said
to have been miffed by the development and ordered the errant
caller to shut up. The caller was said to have faced his fellow
passenger and rained curses on him.
Within seconds, the verbal warnings snowballed into fisticuffs
as both passengers threw heavy punches at each other. At this
time, the aircraft was said to have approached the holding
point from where the pilot ordered that they disembark the
aircraft.
Expectedly, the pilots called for the immediate arrest of
the duo who became unwilling guests of policemen stationed
at the airport. Media officer of the Chanchangi Airlines,
Adamu Ibrahim who confirmed the story on phone expressed happiness
that the fighting men were handed over to relevant authorities.
“It actually happened just when they were taxing, the
noise from the passengers were too much she insulted the crew
member, the pilot had to stop and they left the aircraft for
safety of the flight.The flight later left Abuja without them”,
he said. Also commenting on the development, the Director
General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Dr.
Harold Demuren described the situation as unrully, pointing
out that if such incidents were not strongly handled they
could lead to forceful openining of the exit doors thereby
casing a big disaster.
“It is very dangerous, it could interfere with safety.
It is an unrully behaviour and this is one of the distruption
of services we have been saying in aviation. It could lead
to forceful openining of the exit doors and that could amount
to a big disaster,” he said.
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