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KLM apologises after Paralympian denied onboard wheelchair on 11-hour flight
The incident happened on a KLM flight when Babalola, who competes for Nigeria, was returning to her home in Chicago from an athletics event in Cape Town, South Africa. Photograph: Toussaint Kluiters/AFP/GETTYIMAGES View image in fullscreen The incident happened on a KLM flight when Babalola, who competes for Nigeria, was returning to her home in Chicago from an athletics event in Cape Town, South Africa. Photograph: Toussaint Kluiters/AFP/GETTYIMAGES KLM apologises after Paralympian denied onboard wheelchair on 11-hour flight Athlete Hannah Babalola says she was told to use the toilet without an aisle chair or leave Cape Town to Amsterdam flight The Dutch airline KLM has offered “sincere apologies” to a Paralympic athlete who was denied access to an onboard wheelchair during a long-haul flight so she could go to the toilet. The cabin crew on the flight later called the police after the request from Hannah Babalola, 37, who is paraplegic and competes in track events, for the wheelchair, known as an aisle chair as it is narrow enough to be used inside a plane. They first handed her a written notice, headed: “Unacceptable conduct and final warning on behalf of the captain of this plane.” The incident happened on 26 May, when Babalola, who competes for Nigeria and lives in Chicago, was returning home from a wheelchair-racing event in South Africa. She had booked the KLM return flight from Chicago to Cape Town, via Amsterdam, as a wheelchair-using passenger. The outbound flight went smoothly, but as she began her return journey she was taken to the plane by wheelchair and asked by cabin crew, once she had boarded, if she would require an aisle chair during the flight. When she said she would – the flight to Amsterdam was almost 11 hours – the problems started. In a conversation with cabin crew and the captain that she asked permission to record, which was shown to the Guardian, a crew member can be heard saying they could not accept a passenger in need of an onboard chair as it was too dangerous to use during a flight in case of turbulence and that Babalola’s two options were to go to the toilet without using the wheelchair or to “offload” from the plane. “I needed to get home to Chicago to my family and to get to work and I couldn’t ‘offload’ from the flight,” Babalola said. Security was called by the cabin crew but declined to take any action against Babalola. When the flight landed in Amsterdam, the crew asked the police at the airport to be on standby, but they too declined to take action. Babalola transferred to a different connecting flight in Amsterdam to complete the journey to Chicago. She said: “I felt compelled to avoid eating or drinking for the duration of the flight because I feared needing to use the restroom and being unable to access it. I spent much of the flight trying to control my emotions and I found myself crying because of the way I had been treated. “This experience was humiliating, distressing, and degrading. The situation ca