Passengers aboard the British Airways flight BA252, Boeing 777 aircraft, to London to London, to bear an unexpected travel experience this week, spent about 23 hours on the board.
With a planned stop in NASAU, Bahamas, Boeing 777 departed on EST on Tuesday, 8 April at 6:21 pm, George Town, Grand Cayman. But due to a medical emergency, the flight was diverted at the Gandar International Airport in Newfoundland, Canada.
After a five -hour trip, the flight touched down in the gandar, but the crew then drove out of the legally allowed to fly the aircraft.
The Boeing 777 was then determined to land at the Keflawick International Airport at Reckjavik, Iceland to safely fly the aircraft to London.
According to Flightradar24 data, BA252 finally at Heathro Airport in London, Wednesday, two and a half hours in the air on 9 April, locally at 10:38 pm.
The visit to London from NASU expected 11 hours due to two deiters. The flight left for Bahamas on EDT at 10.24 am on 8 April and reached London 19 hours later.
Other places, a passenger attempted to open a jet door over the Indian Ocean, forcing a flight to make a U-turn to take a flight from Bali, Indonesia, Melbourne, Australia.
On Tuesday, passengers were extracted from an American airline plane in Georgia after a smoke report and the burning smell in the cabin.
For Simon Calder, Travel Correspondent IndependentClaimed that the British Airways’s decision to send a new crew to Iceland was the “low-bad option”.
Mr. Calder considered other possibilities such as “living on the ground in the Gander and resting the crew there”, which was rejected.
Despite the challenges, airlines remain the safest method of transport, in which millions of passengers take smooth flights every day.
Earlier in April, an American Airlines flight from New York City to Tokyo was to make a U-turn due to a “maintenance issue”.
Many passengers were stuck in Dallas overnight after preparing for 14 hours of travel in Tokyo.
Flight 167 flew from John F. Kennedy International Airport at around 11 am on Monday. After nearly seven hours of visit to the Pacific Ocean near Alaska, Boeing 787 was forced to make a five -hour turn.
Shortly after 10 pm local time, it landed at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, forcing the passengers to revolve around 12 hours.