Ryanair: Help too late – paralyzed man has to crawl out of the plane

After flight
Help came too late: Paralyzed man has to crawl out of Ryanair plane

Because help was not on the plane in time, a wheelchair user had to heave himself out of the plane (symbol image)

© Panthermedia / Imago Images

After a Ryanair flight, wheelchair user Adrian Keogh should have had an assistant on site to help him out of the plane. Since this was not the case, the paralyzed man had to crawl out of the plane on his own.

Adrian Keogh from Ireland, who has been in a wheelchair since 2015, had actually booked assistance for boarding and disembarking before his flight – and also paid for it, as he wrote on his Instagram account. However, upon arrival at Landvetter Airport in Sweden, help was so long in coming that he had to crawl out of the plane on his own.

Ryanair passenger has to disembark the plane without assistance

The BBC, among others, reported on the incident. Accordingly, the passenger was informed that the requested assistance would only come an hour later. Adrian Keogh said he couldn’t wait that long because he was in pain after the flight and had to go to the toilet. The crew of the Ryanair plane is said to have told him that if he didn’t want to wait, he should get off the plane himself.

“They were steep, wavy steel steps,” said the wheelchair user. His brother, who had traveled with him, offered to carry him down, but Adrian Keogh refused, considering the maneuver too dangerous: “If he had fallen, we would both have been injured.” Ultimately, no one helped the man get out, so he had to heave himself over the steps on his own. It is not the first incident in which he was stuck on the plane after all other passengers had left the machine. “This is unacceptable – all I ask is to be able to travel with dignity,” said Adrian Keogh BBC.

James Taylor of disability equality charity Scope called the incident appalling. It has long been observed that airlines and airports are abandoning disabled people. “The effects are often degrading, stressful and frightening, and discourage some disabled people from traveling at all.” Ryanair and Ladvetter airport blamed each other. The airport apologized. We deeply regret the incident. A number of unforeseen events are responsible for the delay in aid. A spokesman told the BBC the long wait “is not up to our usual standard of service”.

For the “MirrorRyanair said it regretted that the airport failed to provide assistance to the passenger upon arrival. Ryanair is working with the airport to ensure this does not happen again. The airline also said it would investigate the incident want.

Sources: BBCThe mirror“, Instagram


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