Hello everyone! It’s me
Shafira Widihardjo
Today I want to tell you
about something that is happening in this world, especially in the travel section. Because
I know that all of you really enjoyed traveling. But during this pandemic unfortunately
we have to cancel all of our bucket lists in traveling. And now I want to tell
you about a plane which makes a seat for passengers who refuse to wear masks.
Russian airline
designates plane seats for passengers who refuse to wear masks
Russian airline Aeroflot has
announced it will designate specific seats onboard its planes for passengers
who refuse to wear masks.
"It is critically important for us to ensure the safety of
all passengers," Yulia Spivakova, a spokeswoman for the airline, said in a
statement.
Aeroflot, which is Russia's largest airline and national flag the carrier has a policy that travelers must wear masks while boarding and while
on the plane, unless they are eating, drinking, or changing masks.
However, it seems that some passengers are not obeying these
guidelines. And because a plane can't just stop in midair and kick out an
offending passenger, Aeroflot has designated certain seats on each flight for
travelers who cannot or will not follow the mask policy.
"[This] does not exclude the application of other measures of
liability for violation of the rules for the use of personal protective
equipment on board," Spivakova added.
Mask-wearing policies on planes vary throughout the world and
individual carriers often make their own rules. Much of the burden on enforcing
these policies is passed onto flight attendants.
Russia is not the only country where mask regulations on board
airplanes have become an issue.
In the United States, several high-profile incidents have occurred
on flights where passengers refused to wear masks. In July 2020, a Southwest
Airlines flight returned
to the gate at Denver International Airport when a scuffle took
place between several passengers, one of whom claimed it was their
"Constitutional right" not to wear one.
As of August of this year, Delta Air Lines announced that it had
instituted nearly
250-lifetime bans on travelers who had refused to mask up.
The following month, two passengers on board two different
domestic flights in Japan were removed
from planes before takeoff, both for failure to wear masks.
Aeroflot has not announced whether it will implement long-term
bans or other punishments for passengers who refuse to keep their masks on
throughout the flight. But isolating them to a specific section of the plane
may somewhat reduce the likelihood that an un-masked traveler could pass the
coronavirus on to one of their seatmates.
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