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A person died after getting caught in an engine at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport. The incident is the second well-documented case of a death involving a plane engine in 2024. AdvertisementA person has died after ending up in a plane's engine at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport on Wednesday. "A fatal incident took place at Schiphol today during which a person ended up in a running aircraft engine," the airline said in a statement. In January, a 30-year-old man died after climbing inside a Delta Air Lines plane's engine at Salt Lake City airport.
Persons: , It's, De Telegraaf, Rintel Organizations: Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, Service, Embraer, KLM, Business, Dutch Royal Military Police, Delta Air Lines, Security, American Airlines Locations: Amsterdam, Billund, Denmark, Schiphol, Salt Lake City
Feel-good war on short flights misses the mark
  + stars: | 2023-09-04 | by ( Rebecca Christie | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
REUTERS/Bryan Woolston Acquire Licensing RightsBRUSSELS, Sept 4 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Short flights within Europe are frequent flyers on wish lists of things to ban. But not all short flights are alike, and banning commercial hops makes less sense than targeting private jets. Limiting private jet travel would make a bigger difference, with fewer broad-based disruptions. Reuters GraphicsFollow @rebeccawire on XCONTEXT NEWSCountries such as France, Spain, Belgium and Germany have enacted or are considering measures to reduce or ban short flights. More than half of 2022 private jet travel was for distances of less than 750 km.
Persons: Bryan Woolston, Marjan, Davy, Stephen Furlong, George Hay, Oliver Taslic Organizations: Airbus, LaGuardia, REUTERS, Bryan Woolston Acquire, Rights, Reuters, Greenpeace, International Energy Agency, KLM, Institute for Policy Studies, Air, Brussels Airlines, European Commission . Aviation, Thomson Locations: New York City , New York, U.S, Rights BRUSSELS, Europe, Germany, Spain, France, Africa, Belgium
KLM's CEO told Politico: "We are moving our customers from plane to train." The Dutch airline has been buying tickets on the high-speed Thalys train from Amsterdam to Brussels. KLM, the flag carrier airline of the Netherlands, is buying train tickets for its customers traveling from Amsterdam to Brussels, Politico reported. "We are moving our customers from plane to train," CEO Marjan Rintel told Politico. Then in February, it announced it was buying tickets on four more Thalys trains for passengers transferring between the two airports.
Persons: Marjan Rintel, AeroTime, Rintel Organizations: Politico, KLM, Amsterdam's, Dutch Locations: Amsterdam, Brussels, Long, Netherlands, Belgium, Los Angeles, San Diego, Long Island, Schiphol
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