lozza wrote:Whilst the reporting has been shocking, some of the comments on here haven't been much better either.
At the risk of being shot down, I agree with you to some extent.
Without doubt, the flight deck crew performed exceptionally well by executing a textbook emergency landing, and overall the cabin crew are to be credited for getting 300-odd passengers off within a couple of minutes.
In any incident like this there will be some uninformed, sensationalist reporting. That's regrettable, but inevitable. But the attitude towards passengers who've spoken to the media seems to be somewhat disdainful - "we know what we're talking about, you don't, so shut up".
Tom Alridge, who I heard on BBC News talking about a "panicking" cabin crew member, seemed very articulate. To me, he didn't sound like he was sensationalising - he just gave an honest account, from a normal passenger's perspective, of what he saw. He was there, yet some on here have rubbished what he said even though they weren't there.
Yes, the cabin crew are trained to be assertive in an emergency but maybe Mr Alridge was right and one was a bit over-zealous? Witnesses spoke about people falling on top of each other at the bottom of the slides, and we know several people needed hospital treatment for fractures, so maybe some passengers were sent down - with every good intention - before the slide was clear.
Or maybe they weren't, and the crew all did a brilliant job (as most of them undoubtedly did). The point is, unless we were there, we don't know for sure so perhaps it's unfair to accuse "uninformed" passengers of speculation when really we're just as guilty sometimes?