The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Stowaway ‘in life-threatenin­g condition’ after surviving flight in plane’s landing gear

- By Our Foreign Staff

A STOWAWAY who survived -50C temperatur­es during a flight from Algeria to Paris was discovered in the plane’s landing gear compartmen­t after it arrived in the French capital.

The man, believed to be in his 20s, was found during technical checks on the plane after the Air Algerie flight from Oran touched down at Orly airport, prosecutor­s said.

He had no ID on him, and was taken to hospital in serious condition, they said.

An airport source earlier reported that the man “was alive but in a life-threatenin­g condition because of severe hypothermi­a”. Commercial aircraft cruise between 30,000 and 40,000ft altitude, where temperatur­es typically drop to approximat­ely -50C (-58F).

A lack of oxygen makes survival unlikely for anyone travelling in a landing gear compartmen­t, which is neither heated nor pressurise­d.

According to US Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) data, 132 people tried to travel in the landing gear compartmen­ts of commercial aircraft between 1947 and 2021.

Those who do so are known in the industry as wheel-well stowaways.

In April of this year, the body of a man was discovered in the landing gear of a plane at Schiphol airport in Amsterdam that had flown in from Toronto, prior to which it had been in Nigeria.

Four months earlier, two passengers were found dead on arrival in the landing gear storage space of a plane which flew from Chile’s capital, Santiago, and its Colombian counterpar­t, Bogotá.

In July 2019, the frozen body of a man fell into a garden in a London suburb as the plane he had hidden on was approachin­g Heathrow airport.

He was believed to have stowed himself away in the landing gear compartmen­t of the Kenya Airways plane.

The mortality rate for people risking such journeys is extremely high, at 77 per cent, according to FAA figures.

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