US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
China / Society

Passengers compensated for others smoking on flight

By Zhang Yu (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2014-09-01 14:53

Twenty-three passengers on a flight from Chengdu to Beijing on Saturday received 1,800 yuan ($293) each as compensation for people smoking during the flight, Beijing News reported.

Passengers compensated for others smoking on flight
Smoking scenes still cloud screens

Passengers compensated for others smoking on flight
Lawmakers urge full tobacco ad ban

Flight KN5216 of China United Airlines, carrying 180 passengers, departed from Chengdu at 10 pm, after which a passenger reported someone smoking in the toilet.

The passenger, surnamed Yan, said the smoker's matches were confiscated by a steward who wondered why the smoke detector had not sounded an alert.

The plane was then diverted to Taiyuan, Shanxi province, due to bad weather in Beijing.

During the stopover, five other passengers were found smoking on the ramp.

A passenger surnamed Huo said there were aircraft refuellers operating near the plane at the time, so smoking there was very dangerous.

The offenders were asked by a steward to stop smoking after Huo reported their actions.

According to Huo, the police in Taiyuan suggested that all passengers should undergo another security check but the crew refused and said there was no need.

After landing at Beijing Nanyuan Airport on Sunday morning, some passengers were angry about the aircrew's handling of the incident, and demanded the captain of the plane apologize.

After nine hours of waiting at the airport, 23 passengers were given compensation and round-trip tickets from the airline, which promised a further investigation.

The company said it will order the captain to make an apology and return the cost of the tickets for the 23 passengers, if what they said is true.

According to Huo, who recorded a conversation between the passengers and crew members at Beijing airport, the captain said he knew about the smoking but, as the plane had landed safely, there was nothing more to discuss.

Aviation expert Zhang Qihuai said smoking on planes or on the ramps is dangerous and forbidden. The smoke detector also failed to alert crew members to the smoke, which was a great risk. Passengers' lives should not be risked to that extent, Zhang said.

More than 20,000 Sina micro-bloggers had viewed or commented on the matter by 11 am on Monday.

CCTV's official migro blog about the incident received about 1,000 comments in two hours.

A micro-blogger going by the name of Jingwumen said the smokers should be forbidden from flying ever again, adding that their actions were just like driving drunk.

Lingjun posted that passengers had risked their lives and wasted their time waiting, for which the airline should pay more compensation, and those who smoked should be punished severely.

Some bloggers also said the passengers who smoked on the plane were to blame and it was their behavior that caused damage to the airline.

Still others blamed the security checks at Chengdu airport for not finding and confiscating the matches.

A worker at Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport said matches are hard to detect during a security check and other passengers have taken matches on planes before.

Highlights
Hot Topics
...