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  • 17
    Aug
    2012
    7:22am, EDT

    Plane diverts to Syria, passengers asked if they could pay for fuel

    By The Associated Press

    PARIS -- An emergency layover in Syria's war-torn capital was bad enough. Then passengers on Air France Flight 562 were asked to open their wallets to check if they had enough cash to pay for more fuel. 

    The plane, heading from Paris to Lebanon's capital, diverted amid clashes near the Beirut airport on Wednesday. Low on fuel, it instead landed in Damascus, the capital of neighboring Syria, where a civil war is raging.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    An Air France spokesman explained Friday that the crew inquired about passenger cash only as a "precautionary measure" because of the "very unusual circumstances."

     Sanctions against Syria complicated payment for extra fuel. 

    He said Air France found a way to pay for the fill-up without tapping customer pockets — and apologized for the inconvenience. 

    The plane landed safely in Beirut.

    261 comments

    His original plan was to surrender.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, mideast, diverted, syria, aviation, beirut, air-france, featured, passengers
  • 16
    Jan
    2012
    7:28am, EST

    Flight diverts to Fla. after 'unruly' couple seeks Champagne in first class

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    A Delta Air Lines flight from Atlanta to Costa Rica was diverted to Tampa, Fla., on Sunday evening after a couple from Germany became unruly, officials said.

    Delta spokeswoman Chris Kelly Singley told The Associated Press Flight 414 departed Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport at 6 p.m. Sunday and landed at Tampa International Airport at 7:34 p.m. The captain made the call to land, the spokeswoman said. After the "unruly" passengers were removed, the plane went on to Costa Rica, she said.


    Tampa International Airport spokeswoman Janet Zink identified the passengers as Peter and Gabriele Strohmaier of Dusseldorf, Germany. She said they were seated in first class and demanding food and Champagne and refused to sit down.

    Zink said no charges had been filled. The FBI and Transportation Security Administration were investigating.

    Reached at the Tampa hotel where the couple was spending Sunday night, Gabriele Strohmaier told The Associated Press that a Delta crew member "exaggerated enormously and felt terribly insulted" after her husband raised concerns about the food and beverage service.

    She said her husband had asked for a glass of champagne, but was told it was all gone. She said the crew member then walked away rather than listen to his concerns. She denied that she or her husband was told to sit down and refused.

    "No, we were not standing," she said.

    Peter Strohmaier, who identified himself as a lawyer, said he "did nothing except to say I would like to have the meal and so on...all normal things."

    He said the Delta crew member told him she was not pleased with his attitude.

    "I am not prepared to accept such behavior," he said, adding that in the end he didn't get Champagne, a meal or even water. The couple had flown to the U.S. from Germany earlier in the day.

    Gabriele Strohmaier said the couple need to "take another airline, naturally not Delta" to get to Costa Rica.

    The Tampa Bay Times reported that flight 413 was on the ground for about an hour before continuing on to Costa Rica.

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    The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    337 comments

    Welcome to the US. The airlines have two rules. Sit down and shut up, if you don't do those things, you're kicked off.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: delta, security, flight, diverted, faa

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