Suspected stowaway found alive
A suspected
stowaway is being treated in a London hospital after being found unconscious on
Thursday on a British Airways flight from Johannesburg after the plane had
landed, British police said on today.
Police said
that also on yesterday, they had found the body of a dead man on the roof of an
office under the flight path to Heathrow airport and were trying to work out if
he could have fallen off the same plane.
The man
found alive is believed to be 24 years old and police said in a statement that
he was found in the undercarriage of the plane.
“His
condition is now described as critical,” the statement said.
A police
spokesman told AFP that the possibility that the two men were on the same plane
is “one of the lines of inquiry”.
The police
were called about the suspected stowaway on the 8,000-mile (12,875-kilometre)
flight from South Africa at 8:28 am and about the body at 9:35 am.
The flight
takes 11 hours and outside temperatures during the journey would fall as low as
minus 60 degrees Celsius (minus 76 Fahrenheit).
A British
Airways spokeswoman said: “We are working with the Metropolitan Police and the
authorities in Johannesburg to establish the facts surrounding this very rare
case”.
The body was
found on the roof of the offices of notonthehighstreet.com, an online retailer,
in Richmond, a wealthy southwest suburb of London.
“Officers
and the London ambulance service attended and found the body of a male on the
roof of the premises,” the company said in a statement.
“The death is
currently being treated as unexplained but early indications are that the body
may be that of an airline stowaway,” the statement said.
There have
been several cases of stowaways being found dead clinging to the landing gear
of planes.
In 2012, a
man from Mozambique fell from the undercarriage of a Heathrow-bound flight from
Angola onto a street under the flight path near Richmond.
An inquest
found that he may have survived freezing temperatures for most of the flight
but was “dead or nearly dead” by the time he hit the ground.
“It’s very
shocking when it’s so close to you,” said Reverend Neil Summers from the St
John the Divine church opposite where the body was found on Thursday.
“In one
sense it’s not totally surprising as it’s happened before,” he said.
In April, an
Indonesian stowaway survived an hour-long flight from Sumatra to Jakarta hidden
in the undercarriage of the plane.
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