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Flight to Spain Returns After Rodent Sighting On Board

An SAS Airbus A320neo flight from Stockholm to Spain's Costa del Sol was forced to turn around after a rodent was spotted on board.

17 Feb, 10:03 — 17 Feb, 10:03
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Business Insider4d ago

Hide and squeak: Passengers flying to Spain endured a flight to nowhere after a rodent was spotted on board

An SAS Airbus A320neo. Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images A flight from Stockholm to Spain's Costa del Sol turned around earlier this month. It diverted after a rodent sighting on board, a spokesperson for SAS told Business Insider. A replacement plane landed in Málaga five hours later than the first one was scheduled to. Passengers in Europe had a grueling flight to nowhere earlier this month due to an unusual passenger. A Scandinavian Airlines flight turned around after a rodent was spotted on board. Flight 1583 departed Stockholm Arlanda Airport on February 7 and was supposed to land in Málaga, Spain, four hours later. However, almost two hours into the journey, the Airbus A320neo U-turned while flying over Belgium, according to flight-tracking data. It flew back to Sweden, touching down in the capital 3 hours and 20 minutes after taking off. In a statement to Business Insider, an airline spokesperson said the plane turned around "after a suspected rodent sighting on board." "We followed established procedures and, as a precaution, returned the aircraft to Arlanda to carry out standard inspections of both the aircraft and relevant suppliers," they added. "Passengers were boarded on a new aircraft to Malaga shortly after." SAS did not confirm exactly what kind of rodent was spotted, but Flightradar24 reported that it was a mouse. Diverting a plane due to a rodent might seem bizarre, but loose animals on board can pose a safety risk. It could potentially damage electrical wiring or other components, leading to system faults or, in rare cases, a fire. Data from Flightradar24 shows an extra flight, operated under the call sign SAS95T, flew from Stockholm to Málaga later the same day. It arrived around 3:30 p.m., five hours later than passengers were first scheduled to arrive in the Costa del Sol. This wasn't the first time that such an unwelcome passenger has caused a flight to turn around. In 2024, One Mile at a Time reported that an SAS flight to Malága returned to Copenhagen after a mouse was found in somebody's in-flight meal, before it escaped into the cabin. Later that year, a TAP Air Portugal plane was grounded after 132 hamsters escaped from their cages inside the cargo hold. Read the original article on Business Insider

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