Stowaway falls from plane over London, narrowly missing sunbather
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[July 20, 2019]
By Andrew MacAskill and Kylie MacLellan
LONDON (Reuters) - The body of a suspected
stowaway fell hundreds of meters from a plane flying over southwest
London, landing in the garden of a man's home, just missing him as he
sunbathed, according to neighbors.
Police believe the man fell into the property in Clapham from the
landing compartment of a Kenya Airways plane as it lowered its wheels on
the approach to Heathrow Airport.
A neighbor, who asked not to be named, said the body landed only three
feet (one meter) from the resident.
"He was so lucky not to be hit and killed. The impact obliterated the
body," the neighbor told The Sun newspaper.
"He didn’t even realize what it was to begin with. He was asleep and
then there was a huge impact."
Police said in a statement they were called to a home on Sunday after
the body was found. A post-mortem examination is due to be carried out
and the man has not yet been identified.
A bag, water and some food was found in the landing gear compartment of
the plane after it arrived at Heathrow.
Photographs show the body landed partly on concrete paving slabs and
partly on a lawn - leaving a crater in the garden of the house, which is
more than 10 miles (15 km) from Heathrow.
Another neighbor told the Press Association that he heard a "whomp" when
the body hit the ground, and went upstairs to look out of a window.
"At first I though it was a tramp asleep in the garden. He had all of
his clothes on and everything," the neighbor was quoted as saying.
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General view outside a house where the body of a suspected stowaway
fell into the back garden from a plane flying over southwest London,
Britain, July 2, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
"I had a closer look and saw there was blood all over the walls of
the garden. His head was not in a good way. I realized immediately
that he had fallen."
Kenya Airways said the 4,250-mile trip from Nairobi to Heathrow
takes eight hours and 50 minutes.
"It is unfortunate that a person has lost his life by stowing aboard
one of our aircraft and we express our condolences," the airline
said in a statement.
Stowaways have previously landed in trees and on shop roofs in
London after falling on the approach to Heathrow.
Jose Matada fell to his death in 2012 from a British Airways flight
from Angola. He was not reported missing and it took six months to
identify him.
The inquest into his death heard that he endured temperatures of
between minus 50 Celsius and minus 60 Celsius and suffered a lack of
oxygen before he fell to earth.
In 2015, the body of a stowaway on a British Airways flight from
Johannesburg to Heathrow landed on a shop in Richmond, southwest
London. A second stowaway survived the 10-hour flight and was found
in the undercarriage of the plane.
(Editing by Stephen Addison)
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