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25 air passengers investigated by police after opening emergency doors

(Xinhua) Updated: 2015-01-11 06:29

25 air passengers investigated by police after opening emergency doors

The photo circulated on Weibo shows the opened emergency exits of the plane that got stuck at Kunming Airport due to snow early on Saturday, January 10, 2015. [Photo / Weibo.com]

KUNMING - Twenty-five passengers on board a plane in Southwest China city of Kunming were taken away by local police after they quarreled with the crew and opened some emergency exits of the plane on Saturday.

The China Eastern Airlines flight, MU2036 from Kunming of Southwest China's Yunnan province to Beijing, was scheduled to take off at 8:45 pm Friday. But it was delayed by continuing snow until the early morning of Saturday.

Passengers finished boarding the aircraft at 1:40 am and then waited for ice on the plane to be cleared. An elderly woman felt uncomfortable after hours of waiting. Concerning her physical condition, many other passengers demanded explanation by the captain.

According to a passenger, the vice captain explained to the travelers, but failed to pacify them. "He was quite emotional, swore and cursed to us," said a passenger at 4:50 am on microblog with his nickname Fengyunzhe Tianxingjian.

"Some passenger called police, but the pilot insisted on taking off. So passengers opened three emergency doors in an attempt to stop the flight," he said. "The pilot (vice captain in fact) has lost control and we couldn't risk to let him start."

The flight which had been taxiing then returned to the boarding gate.

A spokesperson with China Eastern Airlines Yunnan company denied that any crew member used "improper language" during the entire process. "Crew members followed the norms," the spokesperson said.

The 25 passengers involved in the incident were taken to the airport police for investigation, while the rest have been carried to Beijing by another flight.

The event drew wide attention from web users in China.

Some people showed understanding to the passengers. "After several hours' waiting, did the airline take some measures to pacify the passengers?" said Fan Kai, editor of an aviation magazine, on his microblog.

But more believed that the method passengers used was not appropriate. "It is very dangerous to fiddle with emergency doors," said Li Chengwei, a lawyer with the Yingke law firm in Kunming.

"Passengers could protect their own rights, but the right shouldn't be abused at the expense of others' safety."

Bad weather in Kunming has affected air traffic on Friday. A total of 83 flights were delayed and another 23 were canceled.

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