The dead body of a
young Nigerian man was discovered yesterday Friday October 26th in the wheel
well, the undercarriage compartment of an Arik Air aircraft, after it returned
from a flight to New York, United States.
One of the airline’s
officials who spoke
to ThisDay said the deceased might have hidden himself in
the wheel well for days and was crushed to death while the flight was airborne
to the JF Kennedy Airport, New York, from the Murtala Muhammed International
Airport, Lagos.
The official who
spoke to THISDAY said the dead body was found during a check on the aircraft
panel as it was being prepared for another flight and that the undercarriage
compartment of the Airbus A340-500 is big enough to accommodate a person,
besides the space for the tyres.
"He probably
might have hidden himself there some days and died while the aircraft was on
its way to New York. We found him when we were doing checks on the panel; the
aircraft probably came back with him dead," the official said.
The source said that
it is out of ignorance that people hide in the wheel well and plan to stowaway
because "the compartment is not pressurised like the cabin of an aircraft
and it is not heated, so survival is rare even if the person is not crushed by
the wheels."
Pilots and
aeronautical engineers familiar with the wheel well compartment said it is
roomy enough to contain a human being, but it is highly unlikely that any one
who hid there would come out alive after a flight that took several hours due
to lack of oxygen.
The official
attributed the incident to porous security at the airport, noting that "if
having access to the airside is stringently prohibited, anybody that is not an
official of airlines, handling companies and Federal Airports Authority of
Nigeria would not gain access to the tarmac."
Another source said:
"The security at the airport is very bad and that explains why somebody
can gain access to the airside and inside the aircraft and no one will know.
Security around the
cargo area is even worse and from there anybody can take anything into the
tarmac. Now, it is a human being that is smuggled in; one day a dangerous
object will be smuggled in."
THISDAY
investigations revealed that stowaways connive with ground handling companies
to access the airside and the wheel well.
"The handling
company workers and the security operatives indulge in a lot of illicit
activities at the airport and over the years there have been efforts to put a
check on such excesses but every effort has so far failed," said another
source.
Source: THISDAY
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