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Hong Kong campaign group demands probe after HK Express pulls 2 blind people from flight

  • Travellers, 34 and 27, ordered off plane before take-off for Tokyo, told by crew member they could not fly for ‘safety reasons’

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HK Express apologised to the passengers but defended the decision made by their crew as being “entirely based on safety considerations”. Photo:  HK Express
A Hong Kong organisation for the blind has called on budget carrier HK Express to investigate after two visually impaired passengers said they were forcibly removed from a flight, an accusation the company has denied.
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The Hong Kong Blind Union on Sunday urged the airline, part of city flag carrier Cathay Pacific Airways, to launch an inquiry and hold to account the crew members who made the “insulting and offensive” decision.

The airline apologised to Andy Chui Man-chun, 34, and John Li Chun-yin, 27, for the “inconvenience caused”, and said it would compensate the two.

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It denied the men were removed by force but defended the decision to ask them to leave the plane by the aircraft’s crew as “entirely based on safety considerations”.

The incident happened at around 2.55pm on May 22, when Andy Chui Man-chun, 34, and John Li Chun-yin, 27, boarded an HK Express service to Tokyo.

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