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Traumatized plane passengers share how they ‘jumped 18ft for their lives' from wing during ‘fire'
Traumatized plane passengers share how they ‘jumped 18ft for their lives' from wing during ‘fire'

Daily Mail​

time08-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Traumatized plane passengers share how they ‘jumped 18ft for their lives' from wing during ‘fire'

Traumatized passengers have slammed the carrier Ryanair after they were seriously injured jumping off the wings of a vacation jet when panic spread about a suspected fire onboard. Danielle Kelly, 56, said people started 'jumping for their lives' after an air steward ran along the aisle and told them to evacuate the flight headed for Manchester, England, as fast as possible. The flight, from Palma in Mallorca, was already delayed by two hours but was taxiing to the runway in the early hours of Saturday morning when there was a loud bang and cabin crew ordered everyone to leave immediately. Mrs Kelly, a self-employed fitness instructor, who was sat in row 18 with her daughter, Frankie, 26, said she feared there was a terrorist onboard so followed other passengers out onto the wing in the chaos. 'I saw a member of the cabin crew run from the back to the front of the plane, he was on the phone and suddenly started shouting, "everyone get off the aircraft now, everyone evacuate". 'It was utter chaos, passengers were screaming, "open the doors, open the doors". It was terrifying, I thought there was a terrorist on board, so I grabbed my daughter and got out.' Cabin crew deployed the emergency chutes at the front doors but passengers sitting in the middle were left with no choice but to jump the 18ft from the wings onto the tarmac. Stewardesses told travelers to leave behind their belongings 'in case there is a fire and the plane explodes' which, passengers said, only added to the panic. Mrs Kelly, who had been on a week-long holiday in the resort of Portals with her daughter, Frankie friend Francine Elkinson, 57, and her daughter, Savannah, 26, suffered a broken right heel, fractured left wrist and smashed elbow, when she fell to the concrete below. Speaking from her hospital bed, in Palma, she added: 'There was no announcement from the pilot or any of the other cabin crew. The door nearest to us opened and everyone ran onto the wing and started jumping off. 'I'm 56 years old, I didn't want to jump but I feared for my life. It felt like a life or death situation. I knew as soon as I landed that I was seriously injured, I couldn't walk but the ground staff were shouting for everyone to move away from the aircraft in case it exploded. 'It was terrifying, we've been left completely traumatized by the experience. I've got my foot and arm in plaster and I've got to have three different surgeries to pin my foot, wrist and elbow tomorrow, I'm in a mess.' Mrs Elkinson, 57, also suffered a bad break to her right foot and underwent a three-hour operation as surgeons inserted pins and plates to repair it. The company director said: 'People were screaming, "get off the plane now," there was no organization, everyone was scrambling and screaming, it was complete chaos. There was no guidance about what to do from the captain or the crew. 'I was petrified, my daughter went first and was standing on the tarmac telling me to jump and she would catch me. I hit the floor and my foot blew up, I thought I had snapped it. I couldn't walk and my daughter had to drag me away. 'I was put on an airport ambulance but it took about 40 minutes for the paramedics to arrive. Danielle was crying she was in so much pain, it was horrendous. 'The way Ryanair have dealt with it is terrible, saying that people only suffered minor injuries and the evacuation was under control. Absolute rubbish, they are just trying to play it down because no one knew what they were doing.' Another passenger, who didn't want to be named, told the Mail she suffered a double fracture to her pelvis and broke a bone in her lower back when she jumped from the wing. 'A member of the cabin crew was screaming on the intercom for everyone to get off the plane, they were saying, "leave your bags, the plane could explode", which obviously just made everyone panic,' she said. 'People were clambering over each other to the exits, it was chaotic. 'I'm usually a rational thinking person. No one wants to throw themselves off the wing of a plane unless the alternative is worse – everyone was led to believe it was an emergency and they had to get out immediately. 'When we got onto a bus back to the terminal people were asking a member of the cabin crew how it happened and saying it was awful. But he simply said, "we did our best, we are only human". 'But there was no direction from the crew and they just weren't very competent. There was no clear guidance, it was every man for himself.' She said doctors had told her it could be three months before she is able to walk again, and she plans to take legal action against the airline. In total 18 people were injured, with six people hospitalized following the evacuation. A female member of the cabin crew is thought to be among the injured. So far none of those in hospital have been visited by a representative of Ryanair, although the airline has been in touch to offer them alternative flights home and an 'insulting' $5 food voucher. A Ryanair spokesman said: 'This flight from Palma to Manchester discontinued take-off due to a false fire warning light indication. 'Passengers were disembarked using the inflatable slides and returned to the terminal. 'While disembarking, a small number of passengers encountered very minor injuries (ankle sprains, etc) and crew requested immediate medical assistance. 'To minimize disruption to passengers, we quickly arranged a replacement aircraft to operate this flight, which departed Palma at 07.05 on Saturday morning. 'We sincerely apologize to affected passengers for any inconvenience caused.'

EXCLUSIVE Why bungling cabin crew could have been reason behind terrifying evacuation of Ryanair jet in Majorca that left passengers with broken bones as they jumped from wing
EXCLUSIVE Why bungling cabin crew could have been reason behind terrifying evacuation of Ryanair jet in Majorca that left passengers with broken bones as they jumped from wing

Daily Mail​

time08-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Why bungling cabin crew could have been reason behind terrifying evacuation of Ryanair jet in Majorca that left passengers with broken bones as they jumped from wing

Ryanair cabin crew are being blamed for allegedly bungling the evacuation of a holiday flight that left passengers with broken bones after they were forced to jump from a wing due to a false fire alert. Several people ended up in hospital after getting seriously injured when panic spread onboard the jet from Palma in Majorca to Manchester on Saturday night. Ryanair are being urged to investigate the evacuation procedure that left at least two British citizens with broken bones and six people hospitalised. 18 were injured in total. The airline has been accused of playing down the incident by claiming passengers only suffered 'very minor injuries' like ankle sprains in a statement where they 'sincerely apologised' to those involved. Danielle Kelly, 56, whose right leg and left arm are now in plaster, claims people started 'jumping for their lives' after a member of the cabin crew with a phone to his ear ran down the plane shouting: 'Everyone get off the aircraft now, everyone evacuate'. Air crew apparently told travellers to leave behind their belongings 'in case there is a fire and the plane explodes' which, passengers said, only added to the panic. An aviation expert told MailOnline today that the cabin crew and passengers shouldn't have found out that there was a fire warning - the reason panic spreads really quickly and often unnecessarily. The expert said that cabin crew should remain calm and are trained not to evacuate until instructed by the captain over the PA. The pilot and co-pilot have a checklist to complete, include shutting down the engines and lowering the flaps, before ordering an evacuation to ensure that passengers can can slide off the wing without serious injury. In Majorca Ryanair cabin crew deployed the emergency slides at the front doors but passengers sitting in the middle claim they were left with no choice but to jump up to 18ft from the wings onto the tarmac. When done properly, the drop should be around 4ft, MailOnline understands. Ryanair has blamed 'a false fire warning light indication' - and insists that passengers only suffered 'minor injuries'. There is a possibility that passengers panicked and decided to open the overwing exits without being told to, MailOnline's expert claimed. But people on board are blaming the staff on board. Ryanair has been asked to comment. It came as traumatised passengers hit out at Ryanair after they were seriously injured jumping off the wings of a holiday jet when panic spread about a suspected fire onboard. Danielle Kelly, 56, a self-employed fitness instructor, who was sat in row 18 with her daughter, Frankie, 26, said she feared there was a terrorist onboard so followed other passengers out onto the wing in the chaos. 'I saw a member of the cabin crew run from the back to the front of the plane, he was on the phone and suddenly started shouting, "everyone get off the aircraft now, everyone evacuate".' 'It was utter chaos, passengers were screaming, 'open the doors, open the doors'. It was terrifying, I thought there was a terrorist on board, so I grabbed my daughter and got out.' Mrs Kelly, who had been on a week-long holiday in the resort of Portals with her daughter, Frankie, 26, friend Francine Elkinson, 57, and her daughter, Savannah, 26, suffered a broken right heel, fractured left wrist and smashed elbow, when she plummeted to the concrete below. Speaking from her hospital bed, in Palma, Mrs Kelly, of Whitefield, Greater Manchester, added: 'There was no announcement from the pilot or any of the other cabin crew. The door nearest to us opened and everyone ran onto the wing and started jumping off. 'I'm 56-years-old, I didn't want to jump but I feared for my life. It felt like a life or death situation. I knew as soon as I landed that I was seriously injured, I couldn't walk but the ground staff were shouting for everyone to move away from the aircraft in case it exploded. 'It was terrifying, we've been left completely traumatised by the experience. I've got my foot and arm in plaster and I've got to have three different surgeries to pin my foot, wrist and elbow tomorrow, I'm in a mess.' Mrs Elkinson, 57, also suffered a bad break to her right foot and underwent a three-hour operation yesterday, when surgeons inserted pins and plates to repair it. The company director said: 'People were screaming, 'get off the plane now,' there was no organisation, everyone was scrambling and screaming, it was complete chaos. There was no guidance about what to do from the captain or the crew. 'I was petrified, my daughter went first and was standing on the tarmac telling me to jump and she would catch me. I hit the floor and my foot blew up, I thought I had snapped it. I couldn't walk and my daughter had to drag me away. 'I was put on an airport ambulance but it took about 40 minutes for the paramedics to arrive. Danielle was crying she was in so much pain, it was horrendous. 'The way Ryanair have dealt with it is terrible, saying that people only suffered minor injuries and the evacuation was under control. Absolute rubbish, they are just trying to play it down because no one knew what they were doing.' Another passenger, who didn't want to be named, told the Mail she suffered a double fracture to her pelvis and broke a bone in her lower back when she jumped from the wing. 'A member of the cabin crew was screaming on the Tannoy for everyone to get off the plane, they were saying, 'leave your bags, the plane could explode', which obviously just made everyone panic,' she said. 'People were clambering over each other to the exits, it was chaotic. 'I'm usually a rational thinking person. No one wants to throw themselves off the wing of a plane unless the alternative is worse – everyone was led to believe it was an emergency and they had to get out immediately. 'When we got onto a bus back to the terminal people were asking a member of the cabin crew how it happened and saying it was awful. But he simply said, 'we did our best, we are only human.' But there was no direction from the crew and they just weren't very competent. There was no clear guidance, it was every man for himself.' She said doctors had told her it could be three months before she is walking again and plans to take legal action against the airline. In total 18 people were injured, with six people hospitalised as a consequence of the way the evacuation was handled. At least one female member of the cabin crew is thought to be among the injured. A Ryanair spokesman said: 'This flight from Palma to Manchester discontinued take-off due to a false fire warning light indication. 'Passengers were disembarked using the inflatable slides and returned to the terminal. 'While disembarking, a small number of passengers encountered very minor injuries (ankle sprains, etc) and crew requested immediate medical assistance. 'To minimise disruption to passengers, we quickly arranged a replacement aircraft to operate this flight, which departed Palma at 07:05 Saturday morning.

‘Crew screamed 'evacuate' so we LEAPT from plane's wings': Inside Ryanair panic as airline accused of downplaying horror
‘Crew screamed 'evacuate' so we LEAPT from plane's wings': Inside Ryanair panic as airline accused of downplaying horror

The Sun

time07-07-2025

  • General
  • The Sun

‘Crew screamed 'evacuate' so we LEAPT from plane's wings': Inside Ryanair panic as airline accused of downplaying horror

PASSENGERS have claimed it was "pure hell and chaos" on the Ryanair flight where people were injured when they leapt metres down from the wing. Protocol allegedly went out the window when a steward ran down the aisle screaming "evacuate, evacuate" and panicked passengers clamoured to escape after a false fire alert. 7 7 7 Footage of the Manchester-bound plane on the tarmac in Palma, Majorca shows a cluster of people on the wing - with some plunging to the ground. Multiple passengers required surgery for badly broken bones after crunching onto the tarmac metres below - despite the airline claiming only "very minor injuries (ankle sprains, etc.)" were sustained. Francine Elkinson, 57, suffered a bad break to her right foot and had to undergo a three-hour operation to have pins and plates inserted. Speaking from her hospital bed in Palma on Monday, Francine told The Sun: "I was watching a film when suddenly they told everyone to evacuate. "There was an open door and I just went through it. I was so terrified and in a daze that I didn't know what was going on, and I jumped." Francine said she was among three people taken to the hospital in Palma - and believes there were six overall with broken bones. Emergency services in Majorca reported that 18 people had been injured in total. Ryanair has organised for Francine to return to the UK on a flight this evening - but she said she is "terrified" and doesn't want to fly again. Her friend, Danielle Kelly, 56, was back in surgery on Monday for a third operation after breaks to her foot, wrist and elbow all needed pins inserting. Other passengers who were onboard have blamed the Ryanair staff for the "totally chaotic" evacuation. Passenger planes left buried in FOAM in hanger with suds spilling over runway after giant fire extinguishers go wrong Richard and Jo Barton, from Saddleworth, Greater Manchester, slammed the airline team's behaviour as "appalling", insisting: "They completely failed." Richard, in his late sixties, said: 'I can't believe what Ryanair are currently claiming. 'They're brushing it off as just a few sprained ankles and banal injuries- that's not what happened. Jo, in her early 60s, said: "I witnessed a woman with a dislocated leg in a weird angle, it wasn't just sprains and bruises. 'In reality, it was pure hell and chaos. I could see men even pushing women and children out of the way to get out for safety. 'People were scrambling to get off the plane through the exit doors leading to the wings, with people leaping 15 feet from the wings to the ground. 'Those people broke their arms, legs and shoulders and they were screaming and crying in agony." Richard pins the chaos on the "lack of training and terrible handling" by the team of air stewards. 7 7 He said: "One them was yelling: 'Evacuate, evacuate!' "Some lads pushed the emergency exit open over the wing, because that's what you're told to do in the safety briefing, and people went out onto the wing. "Everyone thought there was a fire and there was nobody at all there to direct them - so some people jumped out of panic." The former operations director believes even one of the air stewardesses broke her leg after plunging from the wing. "I know this because I helped carry her 50 years away from the plane," he said. The couple claims that after the passengers evacuated, wounded people were lying around in an unsafe area near the plane - and were forced to wait up to 30 minutes for medical help. 7 7 Passengers were left hanging around with minimal information until a new flight was finally arranged at 7am, Richard said. Ryanair's said: 'This flight from Palma to Manchester (4 July) discontinued take-off due to a false fire warning light indication. "Passengers were disembarked using the inflatable slides and returned to the terminal. "While disembarking, a small number of passengers encountered very minor injuries (ankle sprains, etc.) and crew requested immediate medical assistance. "To minimise disruption to passengers, we quickly arranged a replacement aircraft to operate this flight, which departed Palma at 07:05 this morning. "We sincerely apologise to affected passengers for any inconvenience caused.'

EXCLUSIVE I was on the Ryanair flight that was evacuated in Majorca and jumped 18ft from the plane's wing... I now have to have three surgeries and am stuck in a foreign hospital - the 'airline is trying to play down what happened'
EXCLUSIVE I was on the Ryanair flight that was evacuated in Majorca and jumped 18ft from the plane's wing... I now have to have three surgeries and am stuck in a foreign hospital - the 'airline is trying to play down what happened'

Daily Mail​

time06-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE I was on the Ryanair flight that was evacuated in Majorca and jumped 18ft from the plane's wing... I now have to have three surgeries and am stuck in a foreign hospital - the 'airline is trying to play down what happened'

Traumatised passengers last night hit out at 'lying' Ryanair after they were seriously injured jumping off the wings of a holiday jet when panic spread about a suspected fire onboard. Danielle Kelly, 56, said people started 'jumping for their lives' after an air steward ran along the aisle and told them to evacuate the Manchester-bound flight as fast as possible. The flight, from Palma in Majorca, was already delayed by two hours but was taxiing to the runway shortly after midnight on Saturday when there was a loud bang and cabin crew ordered everyone to leave immediately. Mrs Kelly, a self-employed fitness instructor, who was sat in row 18 with her daughter, Frankie, 26, said she feared there was a terrorist onboard so followed other passengers out onto the wing in the chaos. 'I saw a member of the cabin crew run from the back to the front of the plane, he was on the phone and suddenly started shouting, "everyone get off the aircraft now, everyone evacuate." 'It was utter chaos, passengers were screaming, "open the doors, open the doors". It was terrifying, I thought there was a terrorist on board, so I grabbed my daughter and got out.' Cabin crew deployed the emergency shutes at the front doors but passengers sitting in the middle were left with no choice but to jump the 18ft from the wings onto the tarmac. Stewardesses told travellers to leave behind their belongings 'in case there is a fire and the plane explodes' which, passengers said, only added to the panic. Mrs Kelly, who had been on a week-long holiday in the resort of Portals with her daughter, Frankie, 26, friend Francine Elkinson, 57, and her daughter, Savannah, 26, suffered a broken right heel, fractured left wrist and smashed elbow, when she plummeted to the concrete below. Speaking from her hospital bed, in Palma, this evening Mrs Kelly, of Whitefield, Greater Manchester, added: 'There was no announcement from the pilot or any of the other cabin crew. The door nearest to us opened and everyone ran onto the wing and started jumping off. 'I'm 56-years-old, I didn't want to jump but I feared for my life. It felt like a life or death situation. I knew as soon as I landed that I was seriously injured, I couldn't walk but the ground staff were shouting for everyone to move away from the aircraft in case it exploded. 'It was terrifying, we've been left completely traumatised by the experience. I've got my foot and arm in plaster and I've got to have three different surgeries to pin my foot, wrist and elbow tomorrow, I'm in a mess.' Mrs Elkinson, 57, also suffered a bad break to her right foot and underwent a three-hour operation on Saturday, when surgeons inserted pins and plates to repair it. The company director said: 'People were screaming, "get off the plane now," there was no organisation, everyone was scrambling and screaming, it was complete chaos. There was no guidance about what to do from the captain or the crew. 'I was petrified, my daughter went first and was standing on the tarmac telling me to jump and she would catch me. I hit the floor and my foot blew up, I thought I had snapped it. I couldn't walk and my daughter had to drag me away. 'I was put on an airport ambulance but it took about 40 minutes for the paramedics to arrive. Danielle was crying she was in so much pain, it was horrendous. 'The way Ryanair have delt with it is terrible, saying that people only suffered minor injuries and the evacuation was under control. Absolute rubbish, they are just trying to play it down because no one knew what they were doing.' Another passenger, who didn't want to be named, told the Mail she suffered a double fracture to her pelvis and broke a bone in her lower back when she jumped from the wing. 'A member of the cabin crew was screaming on the Tannoy for everyone to get off the plane, they were saying, "leave your bags, the plane could explode", which obviously just made everyone panic,' she said. 'People were clambering over each other to the exits, it was chaotic. 'I'm usually a rational thinking person. No one wants to throw themselves off the wing of a plane unless the alternative is worse – everyone was led to believe it was an emergency and they had to get out immediately. 'When we got onto a bus back to the terminal people were asking a member of the cabin crew how it happened and saying it was awful. But he simply said, "we did our best, we are only human." But there was no direction from the crew and they just weren't very competent. There was no clear guidance, it was every man for himself.' She said doctors had told her it could be three months before she is walking again and plans to take legal action against the airline. In total 18 people were injured, with six people hospitalised as a consequence of the way the evacuation was handled. At least one female member of the cabin crew is thought to be among the injured. So far none of those in hospital have been visited by a representative of Ryanair, although the airline has been in touch to offer them alternative flights home and an 'insulting' £4 food voucher. A Ryanair spokesman said: 'This flight from Palma to Manchester discontinued take-off due to a false fire warning light indication. 'Passengers were disembarked using the inflatable slides and returned to the terminal. 'While disembarking, a small number of passengers encountered very minor injuries (ankle sprains, etc) and crew requested immediate medical assistance. 'To minimise disruption to passengers, we quickly arranged a replacement aircraft to operate this flight, which departed Palma at 07:05 Saturday morning. 'We sincerely apologise to affected passengers for any inconvenience caused.'

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