Beware: your luggage can be stolen in
mid-air
Tuoitrenews
Passengers put their belongings to the overhead
compartments on an airplane in this photo illustration. Tuoi Tre
Even a quick moment of carelessness
can cost airline passengers their portable luggage, as thieves can take quick
action when the owners are sleeping or going to the restroom.
On June 12 a popular Vietnamese singer posted on her
Facebook page that she had her portable luggage stolen during a flight from
The thieves emptied the handbag that she had kept under
her feet during the flight, the singer wrote.
Fortunately, since she had experienced theft during a
flight before, the singer only had some money in the bag, and thus the
financial damage was not big, she said.
“My cell phone, purse, and passport are safe, but the
money is gone,” she wrote.
The singer also said her little sister and several
other passengers on the same flight had belongings stolen.
On April 19, three passengers fell prey to thieves
during their flight from
Shortly after their Silk Air flight, coded MI 602,
landed at
Two Chinese nationals were suspected, according to
eyewitnesses, but a search conducted by Cambodian police later found nothing
on them.
However, Xu Chang Kai, 47, of Chinese nationality, was
later arrested and charged with the theft on May 1, The New Paper
said.
Chinese thieves
Chinese nationals dominate the list of thieves and
suspects on the recently reported airplane cases.
For instance, two Chinese men allegedly stole money and
other assets from passengers on a Vietnam Airlines flight on October 29, 2012
by rummaging through their luggage.
The two men repeatedly walked up and down the aisle and
searched the portable luggage of other passengers, according to one of the
passengers on flight VN593 from Hong Kong to
The eyewitness said the Chinese men took advantage of
the fact that most of the passengers had fallen asleep during the long
five-hour flight, and “even opened some of the bags.”
A Japanese passenger in seat 32C said he lost thousands
of US dollars, but Noi Bai police could not find the money on the Chinese men
upon their arrival.
The Chinese nationals were asked to return to
Elsewhere, in
Eighteen reports about in-flight thefts were filed in
2012, AFP quoted Sam Tee, head of the airport police division, as saying.
Tee told AFP that the thieves usually work in groups of
three to four individuals per flight.
“They strike during boarding, or in-flight when
passengers are asleep or using the toilets.
“Their goal is to steal cash which has been kept by
passengers inside their travel or laptop bags stowed in the overhead
compartments of the aircraft.”
In April 2012,
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Thứ Hai, 17 tháng 6, 2013
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