
A 13-year-old boy from Afghanistan reached Delhi on Sunday after hiding in the rear central landing gear of a KAM Airlines flight from Kabul.
At Indira Gandhi International Airport, airline staff spotted him near the aircraft and handed him over to the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) for questioning. The boy said he acted out of curiosity and managed to hide in the landing gear compartment. A small red speaker, apparently his, was found during inspection. The plane was cleared after anti-sabotage checks.
The boy was sent back to Afghanistan on the same flight that afternoon.
The incident reminds us of a similar story from nearly three decades ago.
In October 1996, two brothers from Punjab hid in the wheel well of a British Airways plane at Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport. Pradeep Saini, 23, and Vijay Saini, 19, wanted to reach London without a visa or enough money.
The brothers, both car mechanics, had been accused of links to a Sikh separatist group, forcing them to flee India. With neither visas nor sufficient funds, they resorted to the extreme measure of stowing away on an international flight.
They managed to infiltrate the airport, evade detection, and hide in the aircraft's nose wheel well.
The journey was fraught with unimaginable challenges. At cruising altitudes of 35,000 feet, temperatures plummeted to -60 degrees C, and oxygen levels were dangerously low. The noise from the jet engines was deafening, and the physical strain was immense.
Vijay Saini did not survive the ordeal. His body fell from the aircraft as it descended towards London's Heathrow, likely due to the extreme conditions.
Pradeep Saini endured the 10-hour flight and was found disoriented on the runway upon landing. He was hospitalised for severe hypothermia and later taken into custody.
His survival was deemed a medical anomaly. Experts suggested that the combination of hypoxia and hypothermia may have induced a state similar to suspended animation, allowing his body to withstand the harsh conditions. He eventually settled in the UK after a prolonged legal battle. He now lives in London, where he works at Heathrow Airport.
In 2015, Themba Cabeka, now known as Justin, survived hiding in the landing gear of a flight from Johannesburg to London, while his friend, Carlito Vale, died. Their story is featured in the documentary The Man Who Fell from the Sky.
The pair, seeking a better life, climbed into the plane without realising the dangers of extreme cold and lack of oxygen at high altitude. Mr Cabeka survived thanks to cabling that held him in place, but he sustained serious injuries. Mr Vale fell and died before landing, The Guardian reported.
Delhi Government To Install Air Purifiers In 10,000 Classrooms As Pollution Soars
Reported by Ishika Verma, Edited by Amit ChaturvediBattle For Breath: Mumbai's Elite Enclave Turns Pollution Hotspot
Reported by Jitendra Dixit, Edited by Srishti Kapoor"Leaving Delhi After 13 Years": Man Blames City's Pollution For Developing Asthma
Edited by Astitva RajThe government plans a phased rollout, funded through the environment cess, though exact installation timelines have not been announced.
Air quality in and around Bhakti Park and Wadala Truck Terminal (TT) has plummeted in recent weeks, with AQI levels soaring beyond 300 - classified as "severe".
His post quickly became popular among people who have experienced similar health and safety concerns while living in Delhi.
Commuter awareness rises after Delhi's BS-VI and No PUC, No Fuel enforcement; fuel sales dip in border areas, PUC queues remain steady, says DPDA president.
India's lawmakers were supposed to discuss the horrid blanket of toxic air smothering the national capital region sometime during Parliament's winter session, which wrapped up Friday. But they could not find the time.
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