|
pupils decided to do what most young adults do after a tortures period
of months revising; find the first flight out of the UK and escape on
holiday. So they decided to head to the Canary Islands.
It wasn't so much of a 'lasminute' holiday as to more of a 'lastminute'
disasater As just before the plane was about to take off the students
were asked to leave because they didn't have an adult with them. All 23
pupils were told that they couldn't fly without a hearing person with
them. The incident happened on an Iberia flight at Heathrow.
It's important to remember that these kids were all in their late teens
and if they didn't have a hearing impediment there wouldn't had been any
hassle.
It wasn't even a shock to the airline as they were informed that the
party of students would be flying with no parental or guardian advisor
at the time of booking. Although when it was found that they were deaf
things changed!
The students were taken to a local hotel until an adult was found and
had to endure the sheer embarrassment of traveling with them to Madrid
the following morning. Which lets face, doesn't conjure up the ideal setting
for a young persons holiday!
The ordeal pissed the parents off and expressed their opinion,
"They boarded the plane at Heathrow after asking if they could sit
together. Their baggage was loaded but someone decided to throw them off,"
one of the parents said.
"The airline wanted them to have a hearing person with them. These
young people have the courage to travel despite their disability, but
they have been embarrassed. A lot of them were crying and they have been
made a spectacle just because of their disability."
Even though the airline apologized for the way things were handled they
still wont allow a large group of deaf people to fly without assistant
from an hearing aid person. A spokesperson for Iberia airlines backed
the decision,
"If something happens on a flight with 23 unaccompanied deaf people,
it could be a very difficult situation, It is against international transport
rules for that many deaf people to fly unaccompanied. The rules say four
deaf people can travel unaccompanied, or 10 deaf people as long as they
are accompanied."
There is however a twist in this story, according to the Disability Rights
Commission there has never been such a rule.
|