Canary Islands flight diverted after ‘irregular indication’ on board | World | News


A packed holiday jet heading from London Stansted to the Canary Islands has been diverted to Portugal this morning. The Jet 2 Boeing 737 was on its way to Fuerteventura, but it instead landed at Faro Airport on the Algarve.

The flight EXS1451 / LS1451 was scheduled to land in Fuerteventura at 12.15pm local time after departing London Stansted just before 8am. Emergency services, including paramedics and firefighters, are understood to have been put on standby at Faro Airport as part of the protocol red alert procedure. The Civil Protection said 35 vehicles and more than 80 responders had been mobilised, including their workers, police, ambulances and firefighters.

Squawk Alert, which follows commercial airlines that declare emergencies, said on its site on X: “The crew of Jet2 flight EXS83LV from London to Fuerteventura has declared an emergency and are diverting to Faro.”

Local reports claimed 179 people were on the plane and a red alert was sounded at 10.24am local time, around half an hour before it touched down. 

JET2 said in a statement: “The crew operating flight LS1451 from London Stansted to Fuerteventura followed standard operating procedure and elected to divert to Faro earlier today, after reporting an irregular indication.

“The crew requested a priority landing and the aircraft landed safely. A standby aircraft is being flown to Faro so that customers can continue their journey.”

Earlier this month, a plane packed with returning UK tourists had to divert following a mid-air toilet malfunction.

Ryanair flight FR1667 should have reached Bristol around 5pm on December 8 after departing from Fuerteventura at lunchtime.

But it diverted to the neighbouring Canary Island of Lanzarote shortly into its 3.5-hour journey after “some toilets” stopped working, according to local air traffic controllers.

It was not immediately clear this morning what exactly the problem, which in the past has led to passengers being forced to use bottles to relieve themselves, had been.

The plane touched down in Lanzarote just before 3pm on December 8 after an hour and a half up in the air.

Spanish air traffic controllers said on social media: “The flight crew on a plane from Fuerteventura to Bristol asked to return to Lanzarote because of problems with some of the toilets. It landed without problems.” 



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