Print Date: 13 Jun 2026, 09:42 AM
Aviation Express
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Air passengers ‘risking lives by grabbing bags and filming in emergencies’

প্রকাশ: শুক্রবার । জুন ১২, ২০২৬

Air passengers ‘risking lives by grabbing bags and filming in emergencies’


Air passengers are increasingly putting lives at risk by filming emergencies and retrieving bags instead of evacuating planes, industry experts have said, with some suggesting fines could be needed.


Passenger aircraft are designed to be fully evacuated in 90 seconds in an emergency – but people reaching for hand luggage can significantly increase that time, blocking exits and aisles as well as damaging slides or causing injury.


The global airlines body IATA has launched a safety campaign urging customers to “save a life, not a bag" after several evacuations filmed by passengers have appeared on social media, some showing people carrying luggage from burning planes.


Nick Careen, the IATA senior vice president for operations and security, said the first priority was to educate passengers that it was “most important to leave hand baggage behind. We need to drive the message home.”


Research on travellers in the UK, US, Singapore, and UAE found that only 61% were aware of the rules. “Four in 10 passengers don’t even realise it’s an expectation to leave their shit behind,” Careen said, speaking at the IATA annual meeting in Rio de Janeiro.


Asked if he favoured fines, Careen said, "Yes, if we could implement them. It could progress because there are regulators who favour it.”


He said airlines and manufacturers were not yet considering potential technical fixes such as automatically locking luggage bins. But Careen said, "Let's start with education—then we’ll have to be a little bit more draconian, whether it be penalties or a lock on the overhead bin.”


The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it was seeing an increasing number of passengers not following flight crew instructions during emergencies. Bryan Bedford, an FAA administrator, said: “In those moments, compliance is critical. Passengers must act quickly, follow instructions without hesitation, and leave all belongings behind.”


Evacuations are rare in aviation, with only an estimated 30 annually. Last year, at least two UK-bound flights were evacuated on the asphalt before departure after suspicions of fire, with 18 passengers sustaining minor injuries while leaving a Ryanair plane at Palma airport last July. Passengers described the evacuation as “utter carnage."


Videos of similar events have provoked consternation, both at those who stop to film potentially disastrous events on smartphones and at those seen carrying luggage off emergency slides.


Some aviation safety experts, however, suggested the response was understandable. Brett Molesworth, a professor of human factors and aviation safety at the University of New South Wales, said unfamiliar emergencies led to a “fight or flight” stress response when only a minority of people acted rationally.


For about 75% of people, he said, "Their ability to process information is restricted. In those circumstances, if they’ve got their bag in the overhead lockers, they want to take it with them.”


Dr Levi Breeding, a senior auditor at United Airlines, said that while there may be “some disbelief and disconnection from the situation” in an emergency, too many in the TikTok generation “had an instinct to pull the phone out," some potentially looking to make money from footage of a newsworthy event.


Source: The Guardian