(CMR) A Delta Air Lines flight from Atlanta to Barcelona on Friday night, 1 September, was forced to turn around after a passenger had diarrhea.
The Airbus A350, with 336 passengers on board, was forced to turn around over two hours after its departure.
“It’s just a biohazard issue, we had a passenger who had diarrhea all the way through the airplane, so they want us to come back to Atlanta,” a DL 194 pilot said to air traffic control.
Delta told CNN that the flight was delayed just over eight hours but landed in Barcelona without further incident on Saturday at 5.16 p.m. local time.
“Our teams worked as quickly and safely as possible to get our customers to their final destination. We sincerely apologize to our customers for the delay and inconvenience to their travel plans,” a spokesperson said.
According to CNN, this was not the first flight this summer to have the passenger experience disrupted by bodily fluids. Air Canada issued an apology after two passengers were told to sit in inadequately cleaned seats that had been covered in vomit on a flight between Las Vegas to Montreal on August 26.
On June 30, a traveler on an Air France flight from Paris to Toronto found his seat’s footwell still wet with a previous passenger’s blood and diarrhea.
Habib Battah told CNN that he noticed a strange smell, “like manure,” but when he alerted a flight attendant, he was handed wet wipes and had to clean the area himself before being offered blankets from business class to soak up the waste.
“We had to sit there smelling the blood for the next seven hours,” he told CNN.
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