Sunday, June 12, 2016

For flyers with disabilities, it is never an easy trip

Bengaluru: People often choose flights over trains or buses for their comfort and convenience. But for persons with disabilities, comfort is the last thing on their mind when they alight at an airport. From having to be carried up a staircase to the aircraft door to being unable to visit the toilet while on the flight, the hassles they face are both unnerving and unnecessary.
Early on Monday, freelance journalist Malini Shankar (47) waited for 25 minutes at the taxi aisle of Kempegowda International Airport for a wheelchair. When she did not get one and the time to report for her flight got closer, she hobbled to the airline counter, only to be told that the time for check-in was over. After she complained, the airline offered her a free ticket on the next flight.

“We were not allowed to stop at the wheelchair alighting point,” said Ms. Shankar. “The airport staff asked us to move the vehicle to the next lane.” After parking, the driver got off and started looking for a wheelchair.

Hers is not an isolated case. Malathi Krishnamurthy Holla (54), Arjuna Award winner and international para athlete, says that each time she books a flight, she has to spend several minutes explaining her condition to the staff and asking for the right kind of chair. In her experience, cabin crew are unaware of the difference between narrow cabin chairs, which can be rolled in the aisles and the wider wheelchairs, which need to be left at the aircraft door.

“A wheelchair can be used for aged persons who can walk a short distance to their seats, but for someone like us, if cabin chairs are not provided, we have to be carried from the door of the aircraft to our seat,” said Dr. Holla. During booking, the only option available is wheelchairs.

As happened with Ms. Shankar, the delay can even cost someone a flight. Dr. Holla says, “There is a board at BIAL when you enter the airport designating a lane for VVIPs and persons with reduced mobility. However, the airport staff manning the point do not allow people to park in the lane, even when wheelchair assistance is required.”
12/06/16 Cinthiya Anand/The Hindu
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