Lifestyle

IATA: Passengers who fail to wear face masks will face heavy fines

Thursday, August 27th, 2020 00:00 | By
Face masks.

Passengers who refuse to wear face masks risk being booted off flights and slapped with a heavy fine, a global aviation body has warned.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said  some travellers put the safety of passengers and crew  at risk of contracting Covid-19 by protesting against the requirement.

“Failure to comply means that a passenger faces the risk of being offloaded from their flight, restrictions on future carriage or penalties under national laws,” warned Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and chief executive officer.

Wearing face masks is a key recommendation of the International Civil Aviation Organisation’s (ICAO) guidance for safe operations during the pandemic, as developed jointly with World Health Organisation and governments.

IATA is emphasising the need for passengers to comply with the recommendation following recent reports of travellers refusing to wear a face covering during a flight.

While this is confined to a small number of individuals, some on-board incidents have become violent, resulting in costly and extremely inconvenient diversions to offload the passengers.

“This is a call for common sense and taking responsibility. The vast majority of travellers understand the importance of face covering both for themselves as well as for their fellow passengers, and airlines appreciate this collective effort.

But a small minority create problems,”  he said, adding: “Safety is at the core of aviation, and compliance with crew safety instructions is the law.

Failure to comply can jeopardise a flight’s safety, disrupt the travel experience of other passengers and impact the work environment for crew,”

Obligations under conditions of carriage

 A plane ticket is a contract under which the passenger agrees to the airline’s Terms and Conditions of Carriage.

Those conditions can include the airline’s right to refuse carriage to a person whose behavior interferes with a flight, violates government regulations or causes other passengers to feel unsafe. 

Airlines also highlight the need to wear a face covering during the booking process, at check-in, at the gate and in onboard announcements.

According to tests at the University of Edinburgh, face covering, when properly worn, can cut the forward spread of potential Covid-19 droplets from the mouth by 90 per cent.

Face covering forms part of a multi-layered approach in the ICAO Take-off guidance to cut the risk of transmission of the virus during the journey.

 Other measures to protect the safety of passengers during the pandemic include contactless check-in and immigration formalities at both the departure and arrival airports, social distancing where possible, increased cleaning and sanitisation at airports and on aircraft, and contact tracing. 

“The research we have seen to date, and our own investigations with the world’s airlines, tell us that the risk of catching coronavirus on a flight remains very low.

There appears to be a number of factors supporting that. The high flow rate of cabin air from top to bottom, constant filtering of air through state-of-the-art HEPA filters, the fact that all seats face the same direction and of course wearing a face covering and sanitisation of the aircraft all play a part,” said IATA’s medical advisor, Dr David Powell.

“This is not just about protecting yourself. It’s about protecting everyone else on the flight,” he said.

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