Air France launches investigation into boarding pass mishap
[COPENHAGEN] Air France on Thursday said it was investigating how a passenger was put on the wrong plane, travelling with a boarding pass bearing the same name as another passenger on that flight.
Ana Maria Bittencourt Marques, a 45-year-old nursing assistant from Porto Alegre in Brazil, departed from Paris's Charles de Gaulle airport on Tuesday with the goal of flying to Copenhagen for a holiday.
Instead, she found herself in Athens after being given a boarding pass in the name of another passenger on the Greek flight, Marie-Christine Midavaine.
"My ticket was made out in another name, and I didn't have enough time to check it because I was in a hurry," said Ms Marques.
Ms Marques said an Air France agent at the departure gate looked at her boarding pass and passport "but they did not check to see if the name was different".
She snoozed during the flight and first became aware that something was wrong when she saw Greek letters at Athens airport.
Air France flew her to Copenhagen through a connecting flight in Luxembourg.
Air France confirmed to AFP that "a passenger en route to Copenhagen on the Air France flight AF1750 on July 25 boarded flight AF1232 to Athens".
"After arriving in Athens, the passenger was redirected to Copenhagen," the company said.
The airline said passenger safety was never compromised at any time during the incident, but it had launched an internal investigation into how the mishap occurred.
AFP
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
VinFast chief plans to invest US$1 billion more from his fortune in EV maker
XPeng CEO says its software, AI upgrades to enter ‘super fast cycle’
Swedish manufacturer is latest to offer electric pleasure craft in Singapore
Mercedes says it will continue to invest in China tie-ups
Xiaomi locks in over 75,000 orders for SU7 car, targets over 10,000 deliveries in June
Ford profit beats on commercial sales; EVs still dragging