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"뚱뚱해서 집에 못 가요..." 비행기에 이어 열차에서도 탑승 거부

By KH디지털2

Published : Nov. 20, 2013 - 17:26

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끄뱅 슈내가 19일 런던 히드로 공항에 도착하고 있다. (AFP) 끄뱅 슈내가 19일 런던 히드로 공항에 도착하고 있다. (AFP)


과체중으로 인해 비행기 탑승 거부를 당했던 프랑스 남성이 이번에는 유럽의 고속열차인 유로스타에서도 탑승거부를 당한 것으로 알려졌다.

작년 5월부터 미국에 체류 중이던 끄뱅 슈내(22)씨는 지난달 영국항공(British Airways)을 통해 귀국할 예정이었으나 문제가 생겼다. 항공사 측에서 230kg에 달하는 그의 체중을 지적하며 슈내 씨의 탑승을 거부한 것.

이에 슈내 씨의 가족은 호화 유람선인 퀸 메리 2호를 타고 귀국하는 방안을 고려했으나, 퀸 메리 2호의 선주 역시 그의 탑승을 거부했다.

외신들은 19일, 또다른 영국 항공사인 버진 아틀란틱이 그의 탑승을 허가하면서 슈내 씨는 대서양을 건너 영국에 도착할 수 있었다고 전했다.

슈내 씨는 비행에 대해 "끔찍했다"고 하며 "비행 내내 울음을 멈출수가 없었다"고 말했다.

슈내 씨의 고난은 여기서 멈추지 않았다. 마침내 런던 히드로 공항에 도착하는데 성공했지만 그는 또다시 런던에서 프랑스로 갈 교통 수단을 찾는 데에 난항을 겪고 있는 것으로 알려졌다.

외신에 따르면 유로스타 측에서는 비상 상황이 발생할 경우 대피시키는 데에 어려움이 있다는 이유로 그의 탑승을 거절한 것으로 전해졌다.

유로스타의 대변인은 유로스타가 구체적으로 승객의 체중에 제한을 두고 있지는 않지만 각 열차마다 거동이 불편한 사람들 위한 자리가 있으며, 비상시에 승무원들이 이 자리에 앉은 승객들을 탈출시킬 수 있어야 한다고  밝혔다.

슈내 씨는 유로스타 터미널 근처 호텔에서 묵으며 프랑스로 갈 다른 방편을 알아보고 있다고 전해졌다.

앞서 항공기 탑승 거부 당시 프랑스 영사관이 브리티시에어웨이즈측에 끄뱅 가족의 탑승이 성사되도록 노력했으나 항공사측은 안전을 이유로 거절한 바 있다. 프랑스 영사관은 슈내 씨의 가족에게 변호사 2명까지 소개해준 것으로 알려졌다.

 

<관련 영문 기사>

'Too fat to fly' Frenchman now too fat for Eurostar

LONDON -- A clinically obese Frenchman stranded in the United States because he was deemed too heavy to fly finally took a plane to Britain Tuesday -- only to be refused travel home by the Eurostar cross-channel train.

Kevin Chenais, 22, who weighs 230 kilos (500 pounds), arrived at London's Heathrow airport with his parents after Virgin Atlantic agreed to fly him back from New York.

He had been in the US since May 2012 for treatment for a hormone imbalance and had been set to return home on British Airways last month, but the airline refused to accept him as a passenger, saying he was too heavy.

The family subsequently tried to sail across the Atlantic on the Queen Mary 2, but the cruise ship's owners also refused to have him on board.

After arriving at Heathrow, a visibly exhausted Chenais described the ordeal to return home as "terrible, terrible, terrible".

"The flight was really hard," he told AFP as he sat on his mobility scooter at the airport.

"I didn't stop crying for the whole flight."

Chenais, who was wearing a t-shirt emblazoned with the Stars and Stripes, praised Virgin for flying him out from New York's JFK airport and paying for the economy-class flights for him and his parents.

"That was very kind of them," he said, "but I was very uncomfortable -- I have a lot of problems with the skin on my thighs and the seat was small."

Chenais and his parents were met at Heathrow by French consular staff who arranged for them to try for a Paris-bound Eurostar train later Tuesday.

But Eurostar then said that he had been refused travel because of its regulations for evacuation procedures.

"His weight meant that we would not be able to take care of this person or be able to carry him to evacuate him," a Eurostar spokeswoman told AFP.

She said Eurostar did not have any specific weight limit, but each train has two places for disabled or limited mobility people and the train's staff had to be capable of getting each of those people out in case of emergency.

Chenais was staying at a hotel near the Eurostar terminal at London's St Pancras station while the firm looked for other options including cross-channel ferries and taxis, the spokeswoman said.

The family's eventual destination is their home town of Ferney-Voltaire near the Swiss border.

Chenais, who requires frequent oxygen and regular care, had earlier expressed his anger at British Airways and the Queen Mary 2's owners Carnival for refusing to take him home.

"We were all set to take the boat, then they turned us back without even seeing me, without even trying," he said.

"So I'm really angry -- doubly angry because British Airways refused to take me."

Kevin's father Rene, 62, said his son had been left feeling "empty" when British Airways refused to let him fly.

The same airline had flown him to the United States in the first place, he pointed out.

"They took him out there, but they wouldn't take him back," he said.

"This is a case of discrimination."

The journey was tiring for Kevin and the plane was not specially adapted for his needs, his father added.

"Kevin has always been kind of alone in life," he told AFP.

British Airways said it would always try to accept a passenger to fly "if it's possible and safe to do so".

"Unfortunately it was not possible to safely accommodate the customer and the family was offered a full refund," the airline said in a statement. (AFP)