The Guardian Australia

Stowaway survives flight from Guatemala to Miami hidden in plane’s landing gear

- Reuters

A stowaway hidden in the landing gear compartmen­t of an American Airlines jet survived a flight from his home country of Guatemala to Miami, where he was turned over to US immigratio­n officials and taken to a hospital for evaluation.

The US customs and border protection agency confirmed the incident in a statement initially cited by Miamibased television station WTVJ, which posted video taken of the man at Miami internatio­nal airport shortly after the plane landed on Saturday.

The video, attributed to the social media page Only in Dade on Instagram, showed the stowaway appearing dazed but otherwise unharmed, sitting on the tarmac beside the plane dressed in blue jeans, a T-shirt, jacket and boots, as ground crew tended to him and asked if he wanted some water.

“US customs and border protection (CBP) officers at Miami internatio­nal airport apprehende­d a 26-year-old man who attempted to evade detection in the landing gear compartmen­t of an aircraft arriving from Guatemala Saturday morning,” the CBP statement said.

“The individual was evaluated by emergency medical services and taken to a hospital for medical assessment,” the agency added. “This incident remains under investigat­ion.”

American Airlines issued a statement saying its Flight 1182 from Guatemala City to Miami arrived shortly after 10am local time and “was met by law enforcemen­t due to a security issue”.

The airline gave no further details, except to say it was assisting in the investigat­ion. The flight from Guatemala to Miami usually takes about 2½ hours.

Guatemala has accounted for a large portion of some 1.7 million migrants apprehende­d or expelled by US border agents over the past year, many of them Central Americans fleeing violent gangs and grinding poverty.

An immigratio­n attorney, Angel Leal, told WTVJ the Guatemalan stowaway would be detained by CBP while facing an expedited removal order.

The incident was reminiscen­t of footage in August showing desperate Afghans trying to latch on to the exterior of a US military cargo jet during the chaotic evacuation from Kabul after Taliban forces seized control of Afghanista­n. Separate video showed what appeared to be two people falling from the plane as it flew off from Kabul.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion declined to comment on Saturday’s incident.

According to the FAA, 129 people have attempted to stow away in the wheel wells or other areas of commercial aircraft worldwide since 1947. Of those, the agency said, 100 have died of injuries or exposure.

In one such incident in April 2014, a 16-year-old boy who ran away from home survived five hours in the wheel well of a jetliner as it flew from California to Hawaii.

 ?? Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images ?? An American Airlines plane lands in Miami. A Guatemalan man survived a 2½-hour flight stowed away in the landing gear compartmen­t of an AA jet on Saturday.
Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images An American Airlines plane lands in Miami. A Guatemalan man survived a 2½-hour flight stowed away in the landing gear compartmen­t of an AA jet on Saturday.

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