Jet2 Flight Chaos Forces Emergency Landing After Passengers Trade Blows Mid-Air With Children Watching
Emergency landing in Belgium as passengers clash on Jet2 flight

What was supposed to be a routine holiday flight from Antalya to Manchester turned into complete mayhem on 12 February when a massive brawl broke out between passengers, forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing in Belgium. The whole thing was caught on camera, and the footage is properly shocking.
Suleyman Ozgur Das, who was on the flight, filmed the entire incident as it kicked off around him. In the video, you can see several passengers absolutely going for each other in the aisle—proper punches being thrown, people shouting abuse, the works. An air hostess is right in the middle of it all, screaming 'Sit down! We've got kids on board' whilst trying to physically pull people apart. But nobody's listening. The fighting just keeps escalating, with more people getting involved. Das later told Storyful that the plane had to divert 'for safety reasons', though that's putting it mildly given what happened.
Violence Reaches Breaking Point
The really disturbing bit is how long this went on for. This wasn't a quick scuffle that got sorted in thirty seconds. The brawl continued despite the cabin crew's best efforts, with families and children having to watch the whole thing unfold.
Things became more serious when the footage shows one passenger putting another in a chokehold, apparently trying to restrain them. That's the point where the situation had clearly gone way beyond what the crew could handle on their own. The pilot made the call to divert to Belgium, where local police came on board and removed the passengers responsible.
Belgian authorities took the disruptive passengers off the aircraft before the flight could continue to Manchester. The other passengers, who'd already had their journey massively disrupted and had to witness this violence, finally got to continue their trip home.
Jet2 Comes Down Hard on Troublemakers
Jet2 wasn't messing about with their response. They issued a statement calling the behaviour 'appalling' and confirmed the two passengers who started it all are now permanently banned from ever flying with the airline again. But they didn't stop there—the company's also going after them for the money this whole mess cost.
'We can confirm that the two disruptive passengers will be banned from flying with us for life, and we will also vigorously pursue them to recover the costs that we incurred as a result of this diversion,' a Jet2 spokesperson told Storyful. When you think about what goes into an emergency diversion—the fuel, the airport fees, crew overtime, compensation for delayed passengers—these two are probably looking at a bill running into tens of thousands of pounds.
The airline also apologised to everyone else who was on that flight. 'As a family-friendly airline, we take a zero-tolerance approach to disruptive passenger behaviour, and we are very sorry that other customers and our colleagues on board had to experience this too,' the statement continued.
Airlines Face Growing Air Rage Problem
This Jet2 incident is part of a much bigger problem that airlines have been grappling with for years now. The International Air Transport Association keeps track of these kinds of incidents, and its figures show that unruly passenger behaviour has become a serious concern across the industry.
Most of these incidents involve passengers who've had too much to drink, people who refuse to follow crew instructions, or verbal abuse towards staff. Full-blown physical violence involving multiple passengers is still relatively uncommon, which makes this Jet2 case particularly serious.
The decision to pursue costs is particularly significant. When an airline diverts a flight, it's not just an inconvenience—it's a massive financial hit involving fuel, landing fees, ground handling, potential overnight accommodation for passengers, rebooking costs, and compensation payments. By going after the disruptive passengers for these expenses, Jet2 is making it clear that bad behaviour doesn't just get you banned—it can also land you with a bill that could run into tens of thousands of pounds.
@fox4newsdallasfortworth A Turkish flight bound for the UK was diverted to Belgium on February 12, after a violent altercation erupted between passengers. The incident was recorded by Suleyman Ozgur Das, who was on his way from Antalya to Manchester. Ozgur Das told Storyful that the flight was diverted “for safety reasons.” The shocking footage shows multiple passengers involved in physical violence and shouting slurs, while an air hostess attempts to break up the scrum, shouting, “Sit down! We’ve got kids on board.” Later, a passenger can be seen holding one of the parties in a chokehold, before Belgian police board the plane. A Jet2 spokesperson condemned the “appalling behavior” and told Storyful that the passengers who started the fight were taken off the plane by police. The flight then continued to Manchester. “We can confirm that the two disruptive passengers will be banned from flying with us for life, and we will also vigorously pursue them to recover the costs that we incurred as a result of this diversion,” the Jet2 statement said. “As a family-friendly airline, we take a zero-tolerance approach to disruptive passenger behavior, and we are very sorry that other customers and our colleagues on board had to experience this too.”
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Why This Matters for Everyone Who Flies
When something like this happens on a plane, the crew members who should be focused on safety procedures and passenger welfare are instead having to play referee in a fight. And then there's the psychological impact on the other passengers, particularly the children on board. Kids don't understand why adults are behaving like this, and seeing violence in an enclosed space where they can't escape can be genuinely traumatic.
Airlines have got a lot tougher on this stuff precisely because incidents like this one keep happening. Now it's lifetime bans, aggressive cost recovery, and criminal prosecution where appropriate. The industry's basically saying if you can't act like a reasonable human being for the duration of a flight, you're not welcome on aircraft anymore.
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