Experts reveal how a Ryanair flight passenger was nearly sucked out of window


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

After a passenger was nearly sucked out of a Ryanair plane when a window failed shortly after takeoff from Thessaloniki, Greece, experts are explaining how the window could have cracked and broken.

In the wake of the frightening ordeal, they also urge flyers to heed important warnings.

“Follow crew directions,” Steve Arroyo, a Florida-based aviation safety expert and retired airline captain with 37 years of experience, told Fox News Digital.

BOEING 737 MYSTERY TAKES PAINFUL TURN AS FAMILIES LEARN NAMES OF MISSING CREW

“It seems redundant, but always have your seat belt fastened whenever you’re seated,” he added.

Richard J. Levy, an aviation consultant, former American Airlines captain and Boeing 737 flight crew training instructor in Texas, told Fox News Digital that the depressurization happened after a piece of the engine reportedly broke off and struck the window. 

View of window of Ryanair aircraft

Ryanair confirmed that a flight returned safely to Thessaloniki after a passenger window became dislodged during the trip. (iStock)

“With a cracked window and the pressure on the window from cabin pressurization, the window cracked, broke — and then the extreme difference in air pressure from the cabin to the outside creates a strong suction,” the expert said. 

“The person was then sucked out.”

MAJOR AIRLINE ROASTS PASSENGERS WHO JUMP UP RIGHT AFTER LANDING, IGNITING FIERCE BACKLASH

Rapid decompressions are “extremely rare events” at major airlines, Arroyo said, adding that commercial aviation is overall one of the safest modes of transportation today.

“It is mind-boggling that 4.4 billion passengers flew on the world’s airlines in 2023 — 1.8 billion international passengers and 2.6 billion domestic passengers,” he said. “Yet, there were zero accidents.”

View of Ryanair boarding section at airport

A passenger was nearly sucked out of a Ryanair plane when a window failed shortly after takeoff from Thessaloniki, Greece. (iStock)

But one expert told Fox News Digital that incidents like these are “not as uncommon as most passengers would like to think.”

William J. McGee, senior fellow for aviation and travel at the Washington, D.C.-based American Economic Liberties Project and the author of “Attention All Passengers,” blamed what he called “weak government oversight of aviation safety,” which he said has worsened in recent years.

DELTA FLIGHT FORCED TO DIVERT AFTER PASSENGER GOES INTO LABOR AND DELIVERS BABY MIDAIR

“There is still much that we don’t know about what happened on that aircraft,” said McGee.

A Greek hospital official told The Associated Press that the 61-year-old passenger was treated for neck and shoulder injuries, as well as friction burns.

View of Ryanair plane in sky

Rapid decompressions are “extremely rare events” at major airlines, an expert said. (iStock)

The passenger was identified as Serbian national Ljubisa Karović. Karović’s wife, Svetlana Grković, told Serbian outlet Nova that she “immediately reacted and grabbed his legs.”

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

“I thought: ‘If we die, we die together,'” said Grković.

“They put a suitcase against the window, but it was sucked out.”

Grković told Greek outlet ERT that her husband lost consciousness three times, the BBC reported.

“The girl who was sitting next to him was holding him by the hand,” she said. “Three of us were pulling him back inside. The oxygen masks dropped and chaos broke out.”

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE NEWS

“They put a suitcase against the window, but it was sucked out,” she added.

Ryanair plane on runway

After the reported window incident, the plane safely returned to Thessaloniki, where the injured passenger received medical care. (iStock)

A spokesperson from Ryanair confirmed the incident to Fox News Digital, noting that the passenger’s window had “dislodged in-flight.”

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

The official also said that the aircraft landed safely, and that passengers returned to the terminal.

“One passenger requested and received medical assistance on the ground in Thessaloniki,” the representative said.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

“In order to minimize any delay, a replacement aircraft was arranged to bring passengers to Memmingen, which departed Thessaloniki at 9:53 local [Friday] morning.”

The Associated Press contributed reporting.



Source link