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US flight diverted after man tries to open emergency exit

The American Airlines flight bound for Chicago from Albuquerque landed safely after the disturbance (file image)
The American Airlines flight bound for Chicago from Albuquerque landed safely after the disturbance (file image)

Passengers aboard a US flight grabbed and subdued a man who tried to open an emergency exit mid-air, forcing the American Airlines plane to return shortly after take-off.

Video of yesterday's altercation, shared widely on social media and television, showed passengers yanking the man's hands off of the mid-plane exit door and then multiple people lying on top of him in the aisle.

The Chicago-bound plane, which took off from the southwestern city of Albuquerque, made it above 7,900 metres before turning around to land, according to tracking data.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the "American Airlines Flight 1219 returned safely" to Albuquerque "after the crew reported a passenger disturbance."

American Airlines said in a statement that following an incident "involving a disruptive customer," the aircraft "was met by local law enforcement" upon landing.

Blaze Ward, one of the passengers who intervened, told local news station ABC-7 that the man "already had the safety mechanism down and had both hands on the lever."

"He was like yanking it and he was a big dude, and he had it pretty well pulled. And I don't know if you can hear it, but there was a difference in pressure, a whistling," he said.

Despite over a decade without a fatal passenger plane accident in the US, scrutiny of the industry has been heightened since an inflight incident last month when a panel blew off of an Alaska Airlines operated Boeing 737-MAX 9.

The number of unruly passengers has also soared in recent years, with over 2,000 incidents in both 2022 and 2023 according to FAA statistics.

However, those figures are significantly down from a record high of nearly 6,000 in 2021.