Thai pilot jokes about crashing plane carrying ousted PM
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
[BANGKOK] Thai budget airline carrier Nok Air apologised on Monday after one of its pilots joked about crashing a plane carrying ousted premier Yingluck Shinawatra.
The gaffe highlights how hatred towards the Shinawatra political clan still runs deep two years after Ms Yingluck's administration was toppled by a military coup.
The pilot's comments were made in a social media chat group used by Nok Air pilots that was later leaked.
In it a pilot posted a picture of Ms Yingluck about to board their Nok Air flight over the weekend. One chat member responded with "We have prey on board". Another then added "CFIT".
CFIT is an aviation acronym for "controlled flight into terrain", a term used to describe when a pilot unintentionally crashes a plane that has no technical problems.
Panthongtae Shinawatra - the son of Ms Yingluck's brother Thaksin Shinawatra, who was toppled as premier by a 2006 coup - posted the leaked chat on his Facebook.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
"Even if the messages about passengers were just kidding, they count as illegal and unacceptable," he wrote.
Nok Air's CEO Patee Sarasin wrote an open apology to Ms Yingluck, saying the pilot's comments did not reflect the company's.
"The airline affirms that we work with good governance to serve all passengers equally with no discrimination," he said, without elaborating what, if any, disciplinary action the pilot would face.
It is not the first time the Shinawatra family has been on the receiving end of airline hostility.
In 2012 Cathay Pacific sacked a Thai stewardess after she posted on Facebook about wanting to throw hot coffee in the face of one of Mr Thaksin's daughters.
The wealthy Shinawatra family are hugely popular in Thailand's poor rural north, where voters have helped them or their proxies win every election since 2001.
That infuriates the Bangkok-based establishment, with its deep military and judicial ties, and arch-royalist southern supporters. They accuse the family of poisoning politics with nepotism and populist policies.
In a response to the Nok Air pilot's comment Ms Yingluck wrote on Facebook that "private attitudes should not be link with professional services".
AFP
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Shelving S$5 billion office redevelopment plan proved ‘wise’ as geopolitical risks mount: OCBC chairman
Eurokars Group introduces rental car franchises Enterprise Rent-A-Car, National Car Rental, and Alamo to Singapore
20 photos that show how dramatically Singapore has changed in two decades
Singapore’s key exports up 15.3% in March from electronics surge, exceeding forecasts