British grandfather dies after ‘severe’ turbulence hits London to Singapore flight
A retired British grandfather was killed and around 70 people were injured after a flight from Heathrow to Singapore was hit by severe turbulence.
Geoffrey Ralph Kitchen, 73, and his wife Linda, were among 47 British passengers aboard the Singapore Airlines flight when it plunged around 6,000ft within minutes amid extreme weather.
Anna Proctor, Mr Kitchen’s daughter, paid tribute to her father describing him as an “extremely kind, loving and gentle man”.
She told The Telegraph her father was “a wonderful man and he had years ahead of him and obviously we are completely devastated, adding: “He was a legend, he was.”
Passengers described “awful screaming” as the aircraft suffered a “dramatic drop”, with objects flying and people not wearing seat belts “launched immediately into the ceiling”, causing multiple head injuries.
The Boeing 777 jet was forced to make an emergency landing at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport, where Thai authorities described responding to a “chaotic” scene.
Kittipong Kittikachorn, the general manager of the airport, said Mr Kitchen, who has two adult children and two grandchildren, suffered a suspected heart attack.
Friends of Mr and Mrs Kitchen, who were married for more than 50 years, said the couple left their semi-detached home in the market town of Thornbury, Gloucestershire, on Monday for what was to be a six-week “holiday of a lifetime”.
Mr Kitchen was the trustee and the secretary of an award-winning musical theatre group near Bristol, and neighbours said both he and his wife were actively involved in the area’s amateur dramatics.
He had lived in the town for more than 30 years and stood last May in the Thornbury Town Council elections as an independent candidate for the North East Ward.
During his campaign, he described the area as “a good place to bring up a family” and pledged to support the arts, the environment and young people.
Mr Kitchen had suffered heart problems in recent years but kept active, neighbours said.
“They were very adventurous and had been planning the holiday for a long time. They spent last weekend with their grandchildren because they wouldn’t be seeing them for a while,” Steve Dimond, 73, a close friend and neighbour told the Daily Mail.
Mr Dimond and his wife Jill expressed concern for Mrs Kitchen, who was transferred to a nearby Thai hospital for treatment, and appeared to be unreachable. Her condition is unclear.
Bangkok’s Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital said a total of 71 people had been admitted for treatment, six of them severely injured.
Along with the 47 Britons, there were 56 passengers from Australia, 41 from Singapore, 23 from New Zealand, 16 from Malaysia, five from the Philippines, four from Ireland, four from America, three from India, two from Canada, two from Indonesia, two from Spain, two from Burma, one from Iceland, one from Germany, one from Israel and one from South Korea.
Singapore Airlines said it offered its “deepest condolences” to Mr Kitchen’s family.
“We deeply apologise for the traumatic experience that our passengers and crew members suffered on this flight. We are providing all necessary assistance during this difficult time,” the airline said.
The airline added it was “working with the relevant authorities” on the investigation into the incident.
Images posted on social media showed damage to the cabin’s ceiling, and food, cutlery and other debris strewn across the floor.
Cabin crew were serving breakfast when the aircraft, which was cruising at an altitude of roughly 37,000ft over the Irrawaddy Basin and around 10 hours into its journey, encountered turbulence.
Andrew Davies, from Lewisham, said fellow passengers received “very little warning” to put on their seat belts.
He described seeing many injured, some with head lacerations and bleeding ears. “A lady was screaming in pain with a bad back,” he said.
There were 211 passengers and 18 crew on board Flight SQ321, which took off from London’s Heathrow Airport at 10.17pm on Monday.
The Boeing jet diverted to Bangkok around 90 minutes prior to its intended arrival in Singapore, making an emergency landing in the Thai capital at around 4pm local time.
One passenger said the plane was travelling smoothly when it suddenly plunged downwards.
“It was a long way, and so sudden. There was no warning at all,” Jerry, from the UK, told the BBC.
Jerry said he hit his head on the ceiling while others who were walking around “ended up doing somersaults. It was absolutely terrible.”
Mr Kittikachorn said: “We followed the protocol and went in and found lots of injuries and a fatality”.
Airport officials enacted an emergency action plan and “evacuated the passengers right away”, he said.
The airport’s medical team rushed to the tarmac and tended to the injured, with waiting ambulances transferring them to a local hospital for further treatment.
Around 100 passengers were preparing to board a new flight out of Bangkok on Tuesday.
Dzafran Azmir, a 28-year-old student on board the flight, described how the plane suddenly began “tilting up” and “shaking”.
“I started bracing for what was happening, and very suddenly there was a very dramatic drop so everyone seated and not wearing seat belt was launched immediately into the ceiling,” he said,
“Some people hit their heads on the baggage cabins overhead and dented it, they hit the places where lights and masks are and broke straight through it,” he said.
Mr Davies, a freelance project manager, described how passengers with medical training tried to help “as much as they could”, including administering CPR to Mr Kitchen.
“My heart goes out to the gentleman who lost his life and his poor wife,” he said.
Speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live later, he said: “The thing I remember the most is seeing objects and things flying through the air.
“During the few seconds of the plane dropping there was an awful [lot of] screaming and what sounded like a thud.”
A pair of police officers were seen on Tuesday outside Mr Kitchen’s semi-detached home that he shared with his wife Linda.
Neighbours described Mr Kitchen as a “friendly bloke” who regularly busied himself with gardening and handiwork.
One couple, who lived on the same quiet cul-de-sac in Thornbury, south Gloucestershire, said: “They were very good neighbours, both he and his wife, always had a word to say if you went out and saw them anywhere.”
In a statement, the Thornbury musical theatre group said: “Geoff was always a gentleman with the utmost honesty and integrity and always did what was right for the group.”
06:53 PM BST
Blog now closed - thanks for following
We are now closing the blog as it approaches 1am in Thailand. This is what we have learnt so far:
One person died and dozens were injured after a flight from London to Singapore hit an area of severe turbulence over Myanmar
The flight was forced to land in Bangkok where photos showed the scale of mess and upheavel inside the cabin
A retired British grandfather has been named as the person who died when a Heathrow to Singapore flight was hit by severe turbulence. Geoffrey Ralph Kitchen, 73, suffered a suspected heart attack as the plane embarked on a “dramatic drop”, with those not wearing seatbelts “launched immediately into the ceiling”.
Experts say such violent turbulence is rare and that seatbelts would have likely reduced the scale of the injuries
Singapore’s Transport Safety Investigation Bureau will be deploying investigators to Bangkok to look into the incident
Singapore Airlines has offered its deepest condolences to the family of the deceased
47 passengers on board the flight were British
06:36 PM BST
British passenger recalls people doing ‘somersaults’ as plane plummeted
One passenger on board the flight said the plane was travelling smoothly when it suddenly plunged downwards.
“It was a long way, and so sudden. There was no warning at all,” Jerry, from the UK, told the BBC.
Jerry said he hit his head on the ceiling while others who were walking around “ended up doing somersaults.”
“My daughter will be in [hospital] for a few days. My wife I’m not so sure. But it could have been a lot worse,” he said.
06:20 PM BST
Watch: Passengers carried out by stretcher from diverted flight
Footage shows emergency services carrying passengers from the Singapore Airlines flight out by stretcher after it was forced to make an emergency landing.
Bangkok’s Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital said a total of 71 people had been sent for treatment, six of them severely injured.
06:15 PM BST
Plane fell into air pocket before entering turbulence over Myanmar
The plane travelling from London to Singapore fell into an air pocket as the cabin were serving breakfast before entering an area of severe turbulence, the Bangkok Suvarnabhumi airport general manager Kittipong Kittikachorn told a press conference.
The sudden turbulence occurred over the Irrawaddy Basin in Myanmar about 10 hours into the flight, the airline said. The pilot declared a medical emergency and diverted the aircraft to Bangkok, it said without giving further details.
06:03 PM BST
Watch: Footage of the cabin after being hit by severe turbulence
Footage of the cabin after the plane landed shows a mess of food, bottles, bags and masks dangling from the overhead compartment.
One British man, Geoffrey Ralph Kitchen, died of a suspected heart attack during the chaos and dozens were injured.
05:46 PM BST
Geoffrey Kitchen, 73, who died of a suspected heart attack on the flight
05:38 PM BST
British man who died on flight named
The 73-year-old British man who died on board the London to Singapore flight has been named as Geoffrey Ralph Kitchen.
Kitchen was travelling with his wife of more than 50 years, Linda, when he was suspected of having a heart attack amid severe turbulence on the Singapore Airlines flight.
05:26 PM BST
Foreign office says it is in contact with authorities in Thailand
Following the news that a British man died on the flight from London to Singapore, a spokesperson for the foreign office has said: “We are responding to the emergency landing in Bangkok of a Singapore Airlines flight and are in contact with the local authorities”.
05:08 PM BST
Bangkok hospital says 71 people sent for treatment
Bangkok’s Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital said a total of 71 people had been sent for treatment, six of them severely injured.
“We deeply apologise for the traumatic experience that our passengers and crew members suffered on this flight. We are providing all necessary assistance during this difficult time,” Singapore Airlines said.
05:06 PM BST
Airline analyst says few defences against such turbulence other than a seatbelt
Airline analyst John Strickand told the BBC that airlines have few measures to prevent such disasters except for ensuring passengers wear their seatbelts ahead of anticipated turbulence.
“There is no perfect way to respond.”
“We just need to ensure - as the industry does - that it uses the maximum amount of information available at the time so that - first of all - turbulence can be avoided where possible and so that crews react quickly,” he said.
04:39 PM BST
Majority of passengers onboard from Australia, followed by Britain
The majority of the 211 passengers onboard the flight from London to Singapore were from Australia followed by passengers from Britain, according to Singapore Airlines’ flight record.
There were also 18 crew members.
Here is a breakdown of the passenger list:
04:32 PM BST
Boeing offers condolences after turbulence fatality on its aircraft
Boeing expressed its condolences following a fatality on the Singapore Airlines flight.
“We extend our deepest condolences to the family who lost a loved one and our thoughts are with the passengers and crew,” Boeing said after its 777 aircraft en route from London to Singapore made an emergency landing in Bangkok.
04:26 PM BST
Boeing 777 fell into air pocket before encountering severe turbulence
Just to recap following the press conference given by the general manger of Bangkok’s main airport, the Boeing 777 had fallen into an air pocket in Thai air space before it encountered severe turbulence.
One elderly British man has been killed, likely from a heart attack, though this has not been officially confirmed.
Seven people are critically hurt with head injuries.
04:16 PM BST
Singapore Airlines has released the nationalities of all 211 passengers on board
They are as follows:
56 from Australia
2 from Canada
1 from Germany
3 from India
2 from Indonesia
1 from Iceland
4 from Ireland
1 from Israel
16 from Malaysia
2 from Myanmar
23 from New Zealand
5 from the Philippines
41 from Singapore
1 from South Korea
2 from Spain
47 from the United Kingdom
4 from the United States of America
03:59 PM BST
Pictured: The aircraft’s last hour
We’ve tracked the flight’s final hour as it plummeted 6,000ft in five seconds before making its way to land in Bangkok.
One Singapore airlines crew told a passenger it was the worst turbulence she had experienced in her 3 years in the job.
03:53 PM BST
Singapore to send investigators to Bangkok after flight incident, says transport ministry
Singapore said it will send investigators to Bangkok after the Singapore Airlines Boeing 777 plane was forced to make an emergency landing in the Thai capital.
“The Transport Safety Investigation Bureau (TSIB) is in touch with its Thai counterparts and will be deploying investigators to Bangkok,” the transport ministry said in a statement.
03:48 PM BST
Thailand enters monsoon season after weeks of extreme heat
Thailand and the rest of Southeast Asia have entered the monsoon season, when daily storms rage and rain falls in buckets.
It follows weeks of extreme heat that saw temperatures in Bangkok rise above 40c and 30 people die from heatstroke between January 1 and April 17. For the whole of 2023, 37 people died from heatstroke.
In the Philippines, schools were forced to suspend classes while worshippers in Bangladesh prayed for rain.
Speaking to the BBC, ex-pilot Terry Tozer said it is unusual for such turbulence to occur without any warning. Though in the Far East, sudden severe turbulence can occur at high altitude.
“That’s one of the reasons why we stress to wear your seatbelt even when the seatbelt sign is not illuminated.”
03:40 PM BST
Explained: The three main types of aviation turbulence
03:30 PM BST
Watch: Carnage inside the plane after it landed
03:23 PM BST
‘My heart goes out’ to man killed in accident, says fellow passenger
Andrew Davies from Lewisham who was on the London to Singapore flight said his “heart goes out to the gentleman who lost his life.”
Mr Davies, who describes himself as a freelance project manager in events said passengers with medical training tried to help “as much as they could”, but that the “poor gentleman” died after receiving CPR.
Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, Mr Davies said: “Anyone who is injured, was not wearing a seatbelt. People who kept them on (including me) are not (as far as I could tell).”
He claimed the deceased was a man who was travelling with his wife.
“My heart goes out to the gentleman who lost his life and his poor wife. Awful experience,” he said.
03:17 PM BST
Last time Singapore Airlines saw fatal accident
The last Singapore Airlines fatalities were in October 2000 when a plane crashed on a closed runway during takeoff at Taiwan and 83 people died.
Singapore Airlines has had seven accidents according to records by the Aviation Safety Network.
03:15 PM BST
Pictured: The interior of the plane
03:10 PM BST
Here are more details released by Suvarnabhumi Airport:
The airport says it has activated an emergency plan to provide medical services for passengers on board Flight SQ321.
The flight, which was travelling from London’s Heathrow Airport to Singapore, was diverted to Bangkok due to bad weather and touched down at 15.51 p.m. local time on Tuesday at Suvarnabhumi Airport.
The airport said its medical team rushed to the tarmac and tended to those injured before transporting them to hospitals for further treatment.
“For passengers with minor injuries or no injuries, the Suvarnabhumi Airport has set up a waiting area for passengers inside the concourse with personnel from the airport and SIA working together to take care of and facilitate passengers” to help them reach Singapore.
There were 211 passengers and 18 crew members on the flight.
The airport confirmed that one person died and a number of those onboard were injured.
03:05 PM BST
Turbulence severe across the region
Singapore Airlines is yet to comment on what caused the turbulence, but the area around Thailand is currently suffering severe tropical storms.
Current aviation weather reports indicate thunderstorms reaching up to 51,000ft are spread across western Thailand and well down into the Gulf of Thailand, a distance of around 475 miles.
Last week, a British Airways flight was forced to return to Singapore after encountering heavy turbulence.
One crew member reportedly needed surgery to her ankle after she was injured during the flight.
The Singapore Airlines flight was cruising at 37,000ft before its diversion, according to Flight Radar 24 data.
02:58 PM BST
The flight path
Flight SQ321 took off from London Heathrow Airport on Monday evening at 22.17 local time, flight tracking data showed.
The airliner diverted to Thailand around an hour and a half’s flying time from its intended destination of Singapore after reportedly encountering heavy turbulence.
The pilots requested permission to make an emergency landing at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok and touched down shortly after 4pm local time.
02:52 PM BST
Singapore Airlines offers ‘deepest condolences’
A spokesperson for Singapore Airlines said: “We can confirm that there are injuries and one fatality on board the Boeing 777-300ER. There were a total of 211 passengers and 18 crew on board.
“Singapore Airlines offers its deepest condolences to the family of the deceased.”
02:47 PM BST
Plane took 90 minutes to evacuate, says passenger
It took 90 minutes to evacuate the plane, said one passenger.
Malaysian student Dzafran Azmir said he had fastened his seatbelt but many had not when the plane began to shake.
The 28-year-old said ambulances later arrived and he saw at least 8 people on stretchers being pulled out of the emergency exits. It took 90 minutes to evacuate the plane, he said
02:44 PM BST
Pictured: Scenes in Bangkok after the emergency landing
02:41 PM BST
Passengers were about to be served breakfast when turbulence hit
The general manager of Suvarnabhumi Airport said passengers were likely about to eat breakfast when they were buffeted by turbulence.
“[The crew] probably were serving breakfast because it would take another 2 - 3 hours to reach Changi airport [in Singapore],” Kittipong Kittikachorn said.
02:35 PM BST
British man killed and 30 injured, say Thai authorities
A British man was killed and 30 injured when a Singapore Airlines Boeing 777 plane hit severe turbulence on a flight from London and was forced to make an emergency landing in Bangkok, Thai authorities said in a press conference.
02:34 PM BST
We received little warning, says passenger on flight
Andrew Davies from Lewisham wrote on social media that he was on the flight and that passengers received “very little warning” to put on their seatbelts.
Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, Mr Davies said: “Anyone who is injured, was not wearing a seatbelt. People who kept them on (including me) are not (as far as I could tell).”
He claimed the deceased was a man who was travelling with his wife.
“My heart goes out to the gentleman who lost his life and his poor wife. Awful experience,” he said.
Mr Davies, who describes himself as a freelance project manager in events and conferences said passengers with medical training tried to help “as much as they could”, adding that the “poor gentlemen” died after receiving CPR.
He went on to say he saw another passenger “laid flat in (the) aisle further behind me”.
Mr Davies described “people’s belongings scattered, coffee and water splattered the ceiling.”
“So many injured people. Head lacerations (sic), bleeding ears. A lady was screaming in pain with a bad back. I couldn’t help her - just got her water.”
02:31 PM BST
If passengers were stapped in they should have been OK, says Tozer
“If you’re not strapped in and you’re standing then obviously if the aircraft drops suddenly you can hit the ceiling.”
02:28 PM BST
Tozer stresses importance of wearing seatbelt
In the far east you get sudden severe turbulence at high altitude, the ex-pilot added
“That’s one of the reasons why we stress to wear your seatbelt even when the seatbelt sign is not illuminated.”
02:26 PM BST
Ex-airline pilot says such sudden turbulence is uncommon
Terry Tozer, an ex-airline pilot, has told the BBC it is unusual for turbulence to occur without any warning.
“It is not that common for it to happen without any warning. Normally the crew would be passed information by aircraft ahead of them,” he said.
02:19 PM BST
An update on number injured from the GM of Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport
Kittipong Kittikachorn, General Manager of Suvarnabhumi Airport said: “Seven people are crucially injured. Twenty-three people are moderately injured, including a crew member. Sixteen people are slightly injured and were sent to hospital. Fourteen people are also slightly injured and are in the holding area”.
02:16 PM BST
Singapore president says ‘hope and pray’ injured flight passengers recover
Singaporean President Tharman Shanmugaratnam said that “we must hope and pray” for the smooth recovery of 30 people injured in a turbulence-affected Singapore Airlines flight, which killed one person.
The airline’s Boeing 777 plane hit severe turbulence en-route to Singapore from London and was forced to make an emergency landing in Bangkok.
“My deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of the deceased,” Mr Shanmugaratnam said on Facebook.
02:11 PM BST
Pictured: The chaos inside the plane after the emergency landing
02:09 PM BST
Plane dropped 6,000ft in five minutes
Flight tracking data suggested the plane dropped more than 6,000ft in just five minutes over the Andaman Sea.
The incident came as parts of Thailand were buffeted by thunderstorms as the country’s annual rainy season gets under way.
“At 3:35 pm the airport received a distress call from the Singapore Airlines flight saying there were passengers on board injured by turbulence, and requesting an emergency landing,” Suvarnabhumi Airport said in a statement.
02:05 PM BST
18 people hospitalised
The carrier said “18 individuals have been hospitalised. Another 12 are being treated in hospitals,” without giving details of the nature and severity of the injuries.
“We deeply apologise for the traumatic experience that our passengers and crew members suffered on this flight. We are providing all necessary assistance during this difficult time,” the airline said.
01:53 PM BST
One person dies after Singapore Airlines flight encounters severe turbulence
At least one person has died and dozens of others have been injured after a flight from London to Singapore encountered severe turbulence.
A Singapore Airlines flight was forced to divert to Bangkok after a passenger was killed and 30 people were hurt, local media reported.
“We can confirm that there are injuries and one fatality on board the Boeing 777-300ER. There were a total of 211 passengers and 18 crew on board,” a spokesperson for the airline said.