Flight From HELL – They Were FORCED

Passengers on a Ryanair flight from Morocco to England, which was forced to make an emergency landing due to a “mass brawl” aboard the aircraft, have called the experience the “flight from hell.” The entire flight was subsequently canceled outright.

The flight, which was bound for London’s Stansted Airport, turned around in the air and returned to the Agadir Al-Massaria International Airport after a mere thirty-six minutes aloft after a fist-fight erupted over the issues of seating assignments.

The mischief started when a man alleged to be in his late twenties asked a woman—who was traveling with her daughter—if she would be willing to move seats so that he could sit closer to his wife and his children. When the woman in question refused, the man responded by threatening her. 

Unbeknownst to the cabin crew, the tension building while the plane was on the tarmac continued mounting as the aircraft climbed into the sky.

Once the jet reached its cruising altitude of thirty-thousand feet and the captain turned off the seat belt light, the husband of the woman who had been threatened sought out and started a confrontation with the first man. The two men quickly came to blows. Stewards and stewardesses attempted to intervene, according to eyewitness accounts.

One of the passengers—a British traveler who preferred not to be identified to the public, said that after the men began taking swings at each other, members of one of the families joined the fray, and so other passengers leapt in as well. Women and children nearby to the action started screaming in panic, and the situation snowballed until everyone was involved in one way or another.

Another passenger fell ill during the fracas and had to have oxygen administered by the flights staff.

After the flight staff found themselves unable to defuse the fight, and struggled with treating the sick passenger amid all the chaos, the pilot made the call to turn the flight around and make an emergency landing in Marrakesh, Morocco.