Overview
- Spanish authorities confirmed they were called to the aircraft at Málaga and that the woman was declared dead before departure.
- Passengers said the woman arrived in a wheelchair with relatives who described her as sick or sleeping, and some claimed she appeared lifeless during boarding.
- EasyJet stated she was alive when she boarded, held a medical certificate authorizing travel, was accompanied by health professionals, and that the airline is assisting the family.
- The copilot told passengers he would file an incident report, and no detentions of the accompanying relatives were reported.
- The aircraft returned to the terminal and departed about 12 hours later at 22:47 local time, arriving at London Gatwick around midnight as social media posts intensified calls to review medical-clearance procedures.