Lebanon Explosions: Potential Breach of International Humanitarian Law
Experts say blasts potentially violate international humanitarian law, including ban on indiscriminate attacks.
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The man was discovered during a technical inspection on board an Air Algeria flight to France.
French authorities said Thursday that an unidentified man was found on the landing gear of an Air Algerie commercial flight from Oran to Paris.
An airport official also said: "The man, believed to be in his 20s, was alive after flying for 2 hours and 30 minutes, but his life was in danger due to severe hypothermia." Authorities said he was taken to a nearby hospital in critical condition and had no identification.
Commercial airliners typically fly at altitudes of 3,000 to 12,000 meters (9,000 to 12,000 feet), where temperatures drop to -50 degrees Celsius (-58 degrees Fahrenheit) and the lack of oxygen causes severe hypoxia, so anyone traveling in the landing gear compartment has little chance of survival. there is none. Last year, a man was found on a flight from South Africa to the Netherlands via Kenya. A passenger identified as Kenyan has been found in the nose section of a cargo plane at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport. In July 2019, a man's frozen corpse landed in a garden outside London. A Kenya Airways plane has crashed from its landing gear while approaching Heathrow Airport. According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the fatality rate for passengers ejected from airplanes from 1947 to 2021 was approximately 77 percent.
During this period, 132 people were identified as runaways who attempted to travel on the undercarriage of commercial aircraft, according to the FAA.
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Experts say blasts potentially violate international humanitarian law, including ban on indiscriminate attacks.
Health Ministry says 14 people killed, 450 wounded in latest device explosions, which Hezbollah blames on Israel.
Thousands of members of the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah as well as civilians have been killed or wounded after wireless communication devices, known as pagers, exploded in different locations across the country on Tuesday.