Man miraculously survives clandestine flight from Algeria to Paris in plane’s landing gear

Man miraculously survives clandestine flight from Algeria to Paris in plane’s landing gear

A‌ man has been discovered ⁢hidden in the landing gear compartment of a commercial aircraft that flew into Paris from Algeria with severe hypothermia but alive, French authorities have said.

The man, believed to be in his 20s, was found ‌during ⁣technical checks after the Air Algerie⁢ flight⁣ from⁣ Oran, Algeria, ‌landed at Paris’s Orly airport in⁢ mid-morning, prosecutors‌ told AFP.

He had ‍no ​ID on him, and was taken to hospital in serious condition, ‍they said.

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An‍ airport source earlier reported​ that the ⁢man “was alive ‌but in ​a life-threatening condition ⁢because of severe hypothermia”.

Commercial aircraft cruise at ​30,000 to 40,000 feet altitude where temperatures typically drop to around -50 degrees Celsius (-58F), and a lack of oxygen makes ⁣survival unlikely for anyone travelling in a landing‌ gear compartment which is​ neither heated nor pressurised.

According to US Federal Aviation ‌Administration (FAA) data cited‍ in media, 132 people – known in the industry​ as wheel-well ⁣stowaways‌ – attempted ​to travel in the landing gear compartments of commercial aircraft between ⁣1947 and 2021.

In April of this ‌year,⁢ the body‌ of ‌a man was discovered in the landing gear⁤ of an aircraft in Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport that had ​flown in from Toronto, but‍ previously took ⁢off from Nigeria.

Four months earlier, two⁣ passengers were found dead on arrival in the landing gear storage space of a flight between Santiago de Chile and‍ Bogotá.

In July 2019, the frozen body of a man fell into a garden in a London suburb, believed⁢ to have⁤ been in the landing gear compartment of a Kenya Airways plane approaching Heathrow airport.

The mortality rate for people attempting to travel ‌this way is 77%, according to the FAA figures.

2023-12-28 20:24:43
Post from www.theguardian.com
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