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Professor
03-21-2007, 04:24 PM
Source: http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/200...pseflight.html

Airline apologizes for putting corpse next to sleeping passenger

British Airways has issued an apology to a first class passenger on a flight from Delhi to London last week who woke up to find himself next to a dead body.

The cabin crew had used an unoccupied seat in his row for the body of an elderly woman who had died in the crowded economy section about three hours after takeoff.

Paul Trinder, 54, told the Mirror and Sun tabloids that he woke at 30,000 feet to discover the flight crew strapping the body into the seat near him.

"I woke to see the cabin crew manoeuvring what looked like a sack of potatoes into the seat. Slowly, through the darkness, I realized it was a body," the businessman told the paper.

"The corpse was strapped into the seat, but because of turbulence it kept slipping down onto the floor … It was horrific. The body had to be wedged in place with lots of pillows."

He said the woman's daughter was also moved up to first class, grieving and weeping until the plane touched down five hours later.
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According to the Guardian newspaper, this is not the first time British Airways has dealt with an in-flight death this way.

In November, an American passenger died halfway through a six-hour flight from London to Boston. His body was covered with a blanket in a reclining seat in first class, which was 20 per cent empty.

Other first class passengers in the Boeing 747 jumbo flight to London told the Guardian that there appeared to be no other system to deal with the tragedy, which happens an average of 10 times a year on BA flights.

Trinder, a BA gold card customer who estimates he flies 200,000 miles a year, said that in the future he will choose any airline but BA when given the opportunity.

The airline said the crew had been trying to minimize the disruption caused by the incident.

Professor
03-21-2007, 04:28 PM
GROSS!!!!

There are so many other things they could have done. Put the body by the area the flight attendants go. Even clearing a shelf off of the food area, and then sanitizing the hell out of it later. Curtaining something off would have been a good option.

Saigio
03-21-2007, 04:29 PM
I have to laugh. It is too funny.
Death can be bad, but it can be funny.
Example: This article.

BoogyMan
03-21-2007, 04:30 PM
That is just weird! I don't know how I would have reacted.

Buck Laser
03-21-2007, 06:21 PM
Makes me think of a time years ago when I was seated next to a VERY elderly man. As we left the taxi way for the run way, he started into a spasm of coughing and gasping, throwing his hands up in the air. A couple of flight attendants passed by us, smiling at him. I was very upset, figured the guy was dying. But apparently he flew often on that flight, and the crew all knew him. On the takeoff run, he settled into a noisy snore, and by the time we reached altitude, he was slumbering peacefully, head on his chest.

Not quite like having a corpse next to you, but bad enough for me.

Nitrus
03-21-2007, 08:23 PM
I dont see what else they could have done... how undignified to be kept in a storage place, and I dont think the family would have let it happen. That businessman needs a kick up the arse, and needs to learn to tolerate certain things in life, that sometimes, just cannot be changed.

lily
03-21-2007, 11:16 PM
I'm picking my jaw up off the floor. I can't imagine sitting next to a dead man for hours!

BoogyMan
03-21-2007, 11:18 PM
I am with you on this one Lily. When I pay for a first class flight I don't expect to spend it sitting next to a corpse. I know we are talking about extenuating circumstances here, but my goodness there had to be some other choice.

jafar00
03-24-2007, 09:48 PM
I think Mr Trinder should have just accepted it as a part of life, said a little prayer for the deceased and not made a fuss about it. BA tried their best to offer a little, final dignity to the elderly woman and her grieving daughter by moving them to first class. It must be an awful situation to be forced to deal with. Find that stiff upper lip and just deal with it I say.

preservanation
06-03-2007, 01:33 PM
I think Mr Trinder should have just accepted it as a part of life, said a little prayer for the deceased and not made a fuss about it. BA tried their best to offer a little, final dignity to the elderly woman and her grieving daughter by moving them to first class. It must be an awful situation to be forced to deal with. Find that stiff upper lip and just deal with it I say.

I have to agree with you jaffar00...

It is hard to say how exactly I woud feel about it at the time, but I would hope my attitude would be of that you have described above.

If this happened on an American airline, I wonder how much $ the lawsuit would yeild.