Wednesday, November 05, 2014

'It's fight or flight' - Kiwi hero who tackled Vietnam Airlines passenger (with video)

Mark Ansley. - Source: ONE News 



An Auckland man who helped subdue a Vietnam Airlines passenger trying to open a cabin door at 40,000 feet says he never thought twice about stepping in. 

 Back at work at his central Auckland restaurant El Faro this afternoon, Mark Ansley told ONE News how he and three fellow passengers resorted to brute force to restrain the man, who was trying to jump out of the flight from Ho Chi Minh City to Sydney on Monday night.

"It's fight or flight isn't it. And I tend to fight," he said.

And despite being compared to an action hero, Mr Ansley reckons he's nothing of the sort.

"I was having quite a good sleep and I just heard screaming, really loud panicked screaming. And I sat up bolt upright, looked down towards the first bulkhead where the exit row is, and there was a guy actually at the exit door trying to get it open," he said.

"A cable tie was handed to me and I couldn't get it round his hands, he was fighting too much. So that's when I decided to try and stun him or knock him out, which didn't work after a couple of goes. But eventually I did stun him enough that he stopped struggling."

Mr Ansley and the other passengers hog tied the man and tied him to the seats.

Mr Ansley said: "He was absolutely mad, I would say he was [in an] amphetamine, psychosis sort of state. He was delusional and he was very, very strong. So he was clearly on something and we were pretty worried.

"I was actually angry because I was trying to get home to my six-year-old son and this guy was affecting that, so I wanted to disarm him as quickly as possible."

Mr Ansley says the man claimed he had been kidnapped all his life and drugged and someone was trying to kill him. Through a Vietnamese passenger, the man told Mr Ansley there was someone in Sydney waiting for him, "and he's going to kill me when I get there because I don't have the stuff on me."

Cabin doors can't be opened at cruise altitude, but the passengers didn't know that.

Police boarded the plane and arrested the man at Sydney Airport. ONE News understands the airline is now taking statements from staff on board the plane.

Story and video:  http://tvnz.co.nz


 
The restrained man. 
Photo / Facebook 


A man trying to make a dramatic mid-air exit from a Vietnam Airlines aircraft had to be restrained by passengers, including a Kiwi man on board.

On Monday, Auckland restaurant owner Mark Ansley said he was woken on a flight between Ho Chi Minh City and Sydney by passengers' screams and saw a man trying to open the emergency exit.

Australian police have confirmed the man involved was a 27-year-old Sydney local from the suburb of Greenacre.

Mr Ansley said he saw the man fighting with a woman before the passenger tried to break through the emergency exit.

"A guy got out of his seat, put him in a headlock and took him to the ground and another got on top of him and another got his feet."

Mr Ansley said he put cable ties around the man's wrists to restrain him.

The man was struggling so Mr Ansley had to hit him on the head a few times to stun him, he said.

A group of passengers then tied the man to a row of chairs.

Mr Ansley asked the airline crew to check that the man was traveling alone, and went through his luggage.

"I was worried that this was a distraction for some other terrorism thing. I walked around the plane for the next four hours watching all the passengers to make sure nothing else was going to happen," he said.

When the flight arrived, police at Sydney airport took the man away and took the details of other passengers.

Mr Ansley posted a picture of a restrained man on his Facebook page and wrote: "This p***k tried to kill himself and all others onboard VN773 by jumping out emergency exit. Luckily three lads held him down while I stunned him with head shots then cable tied him."

He also wrote that passengers were later told the emergency door would not have opened at that altitude anyway.

The eventful flight meant Mr Ansley returned to work on Tuesday night with no sleep.

"It was horrible... I was really looking forward to a good sleep on the way back...I just wanted to get home to my son."

The Australian Federal police this afternoon confirmed it responded to a "request for assistance" at the Sydney International Airport yesterday.

The man involved had been been restrained by airline staff and passengers after allegedly attempting to open the exit door on the flight, a police spokesperson said.

"The man was escorted to St George Hospital for medical assessment."

He has been charged with endangering the safety of an aircraft and is due to appear at the Downing Centre court next month.

Staff are continuing to investigate the incident, the spokesperson said.


- Source:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz

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