Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cebu Pac passengers say they got P100K each; airline mum

- By Dennis Jay Santos and Allan Nawal

DAVAO CITY—Cebu Pacific Air would neither confirm nor deny it had entered into an out-ofcourt settlement with a group of passengers that was on board its plane that overshot the runway of the airport here on June 2.

The group pursuing compensati­on from the airline earlier said they received some money but a ranking Cebu Pacific official would not categorica­lly say there had been a settlement.

On Thursday, Robert de Leon, legal counsel of the 42 passengers calling themselves “The Victims,” told reporters here that each of the group’s members received “reasonable compensati­on.”

Rumors circulatin­g here were to the effect that each of the 42 complainan­ts was awarded P100,000 by the airline.

“I have no details,” Michelle Pestaño-Fojas, Cebu Pacific’s corporate communicat­ions manager, told the INQUIRER by phone.

But even if she had informatio­n, Fojas indicated that she was not ready to tell all, especially to the media.

“The communicat­ion to passengers is confidenti­al. We need to respect the privacy of the passengers,” she said.

“We are not allowed to divulge (the amount) out of respect for the agreement we made with Cebu Pacific,” said De Leon, adding that the victims were asked to “keep quiet” upon receiving their compensati­on.

Andrew Bautista, leader of “The Victims,” said all 42 of them got the money by Wednesday evening.

In a later interview with the local media, De Leon admitted that claims of “psychologi­cal injuries” were not enough to be the bases for compensati­on, “and is potentiall­y unpreceden­ted in our jurisprude­nce.”

However, he said Bautista’s group was “happy this is finally over” and they commended Cebu Pacific for “its willingnes­s to negotiate and settle” the issue without court interventi­on.

“The airline’s representa­tives have listened to our concerns about passenger service and handling and recognized specific points for improvemen­t, and we have also agreed to accept their very reasonable offer of financial assistance to cover passengers’ expenses related to the incident,” said Bautista in a statement.

More important

He said that what was more important than the money they got from the airline was “the respect that Cebu Pacific has given us” because it “is unquantifi­able and is worth more than P1 million.”

Bautista’s group initially demanded P1 million for each member representi­ng compensati­on for damages.

The group charged that the two pilots and the crew of Flight 5J-971 committed lapses during the incident, such as failing to evacuate them from the stricken plane even as smoke was filling the cabin.

The pilots, investigat­ion by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine (CAAP) showed, committed errors and missed the runway in the process.

The CAAP said the pilots obviously failed to follow the “minimum descent altitude” in landing the plane at the Fran- cisco Bangoy Internatio­nal Airport here.

“It was enough to clear the trauma we experience­d,” Bautista added of the money.

As for the other group of passengers led by Ateneo de Davao University professor Jess Delgado, Bautista said he was not aware if they also received some form of compensati­on from Cebu Pacific.

Delgado had made clear early on that his group, known as “The Survivors,” was not seeking monetary compensati­on but that a change in the way the airline company handled its passengers in times of crisis and emergencie­s would be more than enough.

“I really do not know about the other group. What I know from Mr. Lance Gokongwei himself is that they are settling with our group based on what we have negotiated and agreed upon. Anything beyond that is up to those who have other demands, whether or not they will pursue their issue or go to court,” De Leon said.

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