Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 26
British Airways Bars 13-Year-Old With Tourette's After 'Bomb' Remark, Costing Family £2,400
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 26

British Airways Bars 13-Year-Old With Tourette's After 'Bomb' Remark, Costing Family £2,400

8 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 26
  • Armed police escorted a 13-year-old boy with Tourette syndrome and his family from Gatwick after British Airways blocked them from boarding a Spain flight over his repeated use of the word "bomb."
  • BA said the decision was not based on the boy's disability but on a perceived security threat, while his father said staff had been warned a day earlier about his Tourette's and possible verbal tics.
  • £4,000 had already been spent on flights for the 10-person group, and the family then paid another £2,400 for replacement Vueling tickets after missing the first day of their holiday.
  • The family reached Alicante on Sunday, but said the incident was discriminatory and left everyone in tears, with one sister allowed to board separately with family friends.
When a boy's medical tic is a 'bomb' threat, must an airline choose security over disability rights?
How can airport security evolve to differentiate a neurological condition from a genuine threat?