A disabled war correspondent was forced to crawl to the bathroom on a recent London-bound flight because the airline banned wheelchairs, he said.
BBC journalist Frank Gardner, 63, shared the degrading ordeal on X Monday.
“Wow. It’s 2024 and I’ve just had to crawl along the floor of this LOT Polish airline to get to the toilet during a flight back from Warsaw as ‘we don’t have onboard wheelchairs. It’s airline policy,’” Gardner said.
“If you’re disabled and you can’t walk this is just discriminatory,” the veteran journo – who was shot and paralyzed by al-Qaeda gunmen in Saudi Arabia 20 years ago – added.
The post was accompanied by a photo of Gardner’s legs on the floor of the plane.
“In fairness to the cabin crew, they were as helpful and apologetic as they could be. Not their fault, it’s the airline. Won’t be flying LOT again until they join the 21st century,” Gardner wrote in a follow-up post.
He also discussed the “inhumane” incident on BBC Breakfast Tuesday.
“It is outrageous in terms of air travel that LOT, the Polish airline I traveled on from Warsaw last night back to London, had no onboard aisle chair,” Gardner lamented.
“I said, ‘Well, how do you expect me to go to the loo?’ ‘Well, we can help you.’
“Well, not really, because if somebody drags you to the loo it’s too difficult. I had to crawl on my backside along the floor – which wasn’t particularly clean – of the aircraft,” he said.
“The cabin crew were very embarrassed and they were as helpful as they could – there was a really nice steward there who was fantastic. He was able to take my legs.
“But the point is, guys, it’s not difficult to have an onboard aisle chair. These things fold up to the size of a pram, if not smaller, and they fit into an overhead locker or into a cupboard.”
This post was originally posted by New York Post
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