A passenger on a flight operated by Ryanair subsidiary Malta Air was partially sucked out of a broken window shortly after take-off from Thessaloniki in Greece on Friday, Reuters and the Associated Press reported, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing
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The aircraft was supposed to fly from Thessaloniki to Memmingen Airport near Munich in Germany but returned to Thessaloniki Friday morning “when a passenger window dislodged inflight,” Ryanair said in a statement to the British news agency
“The aircraft landed normally, and passengers returned to the terminal,” Ryanair added

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The 61-year-old passenger suffered neck and shoulder injuries and friction burns, according to a Greek hospital official who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity

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Global News reached out to the airline to independently verify the details but did not receive a response by the time of publication
Local Greek media reported that a piece of the plane flew off and broke a window shortly after takeoff on Friday, causing the cabin oxygen masks to drop and sucking one passenger’s head and shoulders out of the window
Two airportto Reuters, it said. The BBC and The Guardian also reported those details. Ryanair told Reuters that it is unclear what caused the broken window
Passengers also told Greek media that they heard a loud bang, that oxygen masks dropped and that the plane began descending, the Associated Press said
“Most people had fallen asleep, we had closed our eyes. We heard a sound, I’d describe it like a tire bursting, … but very loud,” a passenger, identified by the AP as Christina, told Thessaloniki radio
“We knew straight away we lost pressure because we lost altitude. … Screams, shrieks, shouting,” she added
Unverified videos circulating on social media from inside the plane showed a broken window and oxygen masks hanging from the ceiling
FlightRadar24 showed a Boeing 737 NG jet en route to Memmingen diverted back to Thessaloniki on Friday morning
The Federal A confirmed that a window broke on Friday’s flight and said it was ready to support the Hellenic Civil A and the NTSB in the investigation
The National Transportation Safety Board, the U.S. federal agency that investigates ad it was notified that the flight returned due to “a right engine issue and cabin decompression.”
One of the Greek airporthessaloniki while investigators look into the incident
Flight records show that the aircraft climbed past 15,000 feet about six minutes after departure, then immediately descended to about 6,000 feet before returning to Thessaloniki about an hour after takeoff, Flightradar24 said
— with files from Reuters and the Associated Press



