Disabled BBC reporter left stranded on an empty plane at Heathrow for fourth time in four years
BBC’s Frank Gardner is left stranded on an empty plane AGAIN after there were ‘no staff to get his wheelchair off’ as journalist accuses Heathrow Airport of treating disabled passengers as their ‘lowest priority’
BBC Security Correspondent Frank Gardner was left on a plane yesterdayIt is the fourth time the wheelchair user has been left stranded at UK airports He has used a wheelchair since 2004 – when he was shot in Saudi ArabiaHe said the that disabled people so often get ‘c**p’ treatment’ from Heathrow
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A BBC journalist in a wheelchair slammed Heathrow today after being left on an empty plane – accusing the treating disabled passengers as ‘lowest priority’.
Security correspondent Frank Gardner was left on the empty British Airways flight from Estonia last night and says he was told that no staff were available to help him get off the plane.
This is the fourth time he says this has happened to him since he began using a wheelchair in 2004 – after being shot six times by militants while reporting in Saudi Arabia.
Security correspondent Frank Gardner was left on the British Airways flight from Estonia last night after other passengers had disembarked and says he was told that no staff were available to help him get off the plane
The veteran journalist, 60, tweeted this morning: ‘It’s happened again. Stuck on an empty plane at Heathrow airport long after everyone else is off — ‘no staff to get my wheelchair off the plane’.
‘I am SO disappointed with @HeathrowAirport as disabled passengers are once again apparently the lowest priority.’
Around 22 minutes after his original tweet, he confirmed he was ‘in the terminal while I’m guessing all other passengers are on their way home’.
In 2018, Mr Gardner said he had been left on planes twice in six months – with Heathrow pledging to investigate after apologising.
At the time, he said Heathrow had a ‘casual disregard for disabled people’ after staff lost his wheelchair and left him stuck on his plane.
He said he was left stranded for ‘100 minutes’ before he could get off his flight from Ethiopia on March 24, 2018.
Staff delivered Mr Gardner wheelchair to the terminal building instead of the plane door, leaving him stuck.
Mr Gardner said his latest issues are ‘incredibly minor’ when the humanitarian situation in Ukraine is considered but that it was ‘objectionable’ how frequent ‘cr*p* treatment’ is given to disabled people.
Heathrow apologised at the time. He was also left on an easyJet flight at Gatwick in 2017. The airline and airport both pledged to investigate.