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‘Screaming in agony’: Passengers recall horror onboard flight


More than 140 travellers and crew members who were onboard a flight hit by severe turbulence landed in Singapore on a relief flight earlier this morning.

Passengers onboard SQ321 which was heading from London to Singapore, recounted scenes of “absolute terror”, with one passenger saying he saw a woman with an “awful gash on her head”, and heard another “screaming in agony”.

A 73-year-old British man, Geoff Kitchen, died from a suspected heart attack onboard, while several others remain seriously injured.

Mr Kitchen is believed to have suffered a heart attack when the plane was hit by the turbulence. Reports say he was on his way to Singapore to start a six-week holiday along with his wife who was also on board.

The Singapore-bound Boeing 777-300ER diverted to Bangkok following the mid-air incident, making an emergency landing at 15:45 local time (08:45 GMT) with some 211 passengers and 18 crew aboard.

Some 79 passengers and six crew members are still in Bangkok – where they are receiving medical treatment for injuries.

Andrew Davies, a British passenger onboard the Boeing 777-300ER, told the BBC’s Radio 5 that the plane “suddenly dropped… [with] very little warning”.

“The thing I remember the most is seeing objects and things flying through the air. I was covered in coffee. It was incredibly severe turbulence,” he said.

Another passenger said those not wearing seatbelts were “launched immediately into the ceiling”.

“Very suddenly there was a very dramatic drop, so everyone seated and not wearing a seatbelt was launched immediately into the ceiling,” 28-year-old student Dzafran Azmir told Reuters.

“I saw people from across the aisle just going completely horizontal, hitting the ceiling and landing back down in really awkward positions. People getting massive gashes in the head concussions.”

Mr Azmir added that people’s heads had slammed into the overhead panels above the seats and “pushed through” some of the panels.

Another Briton, Jerry, 68, was travelling to Australia for his son’s wedding. He said there was no warning before the “plane plunged”.

“I hit my head on the ceiling, my wife did – some poor people who were walking around ended up doing somersaults,” he recalled.

“My son was thrown down on the floor two rows behind me. I heard that there was a guy hitting the roof in the toilet and he was injured quite badly, too,” he said, speaking from a Thai hospital. He added that he and his family were “lucky enough” that none of them had died.

The family had been travelling to Australia for his son’s wedding on Friday, but now would not be able to make it, he said.

One Singaporean man, whose son was onboard the plane, said he was “thrown all over the place”.

Chiew says his 22-year-old son was in London on holiday visiting his girlfriend, who was studying there on an exchange programme. The pair were flying back to Singapore when turbulence hit.

He told the BBC: “My son was on his way to the restroom, while his girlfriend was seated. Both are okay.

“He said he wasn’t injured, he was all right – but he’s a bit bruised, he was thrown all over the place.”

He said his son had messaged him yesterday afternoon to say he had landed in Bangkok after the flight was diverted.

An airline official said that about 10 hours into its flight, the plane had encountered “sudden extreme turbulence” over Myanmar’s Irrawaddy Basin at 37,000 feet.

Source BBC



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