-2.3 C
New York
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
HomeNewsAirline Refuses To Fly Indian-Origin Couple With Special Needs Child

Airline Refuses To Fly Indian-Origin Couple With Special Needs Child

Date:

Related stories

Indian Americans lead US income rankings with $151K median household earnings

Highlights: Indian Americans report the highest median household income...

Iran-US conflict may push up medicine prices in India: Supply chain risks emerge

Highlights: Iran-US conflict is beginning to affect India’s pharmaceutical...

BRICS split deepens as India flags divisions over US–Iran conflict

Highlights: India confirms internal divisions within BRICS over the...

Iran expands Gulf attacks as regional conflict eepens, oil routes disrupted

Highlights: Iran launched coordinated strikes across Gulf nations, targeting...

Trump calls on global allies to secure Strait of Hormuz as shipping slows

Highlights: Trump called on countries dependent on Gulf oil...

An Indian-origin couple in Singapore claimed that low-cost long-haul airline Scoot refused to fly their special needs child and asked them to deplane before a flight was scheduled to take off. Divya George, the mother of the five-year-old girl, posted online that the captain of the airline caused the commotion after he refused to allow the child to fly with an infant seat belt. Reports said they were flying to Phuket from Singapore for a vacation.
Divya’s daughter only weighs 8.5 kilograms and is the size of a 1-year-old child. Divya garnered immense support online when she shared about her situation on social media earlier yesterday. “Our flight that was to take off at 7:35am has been delayed by an hour so far because they refuse to fly with my special needs child. They want to deplane us because they refuse to take her,” she wrote on her Facebook page.
In a subsequent post this afternoon, Divya updated that she is “saddened beyond words” over the incident and revealed that the captain callously said that it is not his problem if her child slides off her seat and hurts herself during the flight. She also posted a video of the incident. There was no immediate reaction from Scoot airlines which is owned by Singapore Airlines through its subsidiary Budget Aviation Holdings.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here