Given the millions of people who travel by air every day, deaths do happen onboard flights with some frequency. However, British Airways’ handling of a recent incident is leaving many scratching their heads. I’m not sure what exactly to make of this…
In this post:
British Airways crew handles onboard death in unusual way
The Sun reports on an incident that happened on a recent British Airways flight from Hong Kong (HKG) to London (LHR). Flight BA32 was operated by an Airbus A350-1000, and the 5,994-mile journey ordinarily takes around 14 hours.
Around an hour after takeoff, a woman in her 60s reportedly passed away suddenly, which is of course incredibly sad, and left her family distraught. The pilots didn’t deem the situation an emergency, and decided to continue the flight to London.
According to reports, the pilots asked the flight attendants to store the body in a lavatory and then lock it, but this proposal was reportedly rejected by the crew. Instead, they wrapped the body in blankets (or some similar material), and then placed the deceased woman in the rear galley for the remainder of the flight.
This is where it gets strange. The story suggests that the rear galley on the A350 has a heated floor, which some crew overlooked, and it’s claimed that this caused the body to decompose at an accelerated rate, leading to a foul smell in that part of the plane.
The flight, which had 331 people onboard, was met by police upon arrival. Passengers reportedly had to stay onboard for around 45 minutes upon landing, while an investigation took place. Some of the crew on the flight have reportedly been on trauma leave. I can imagine how tough this must’ve been on them. Imagine wrapping up a body, and then going back to serving people food and drinks.
In a statement, British Airways claims that “all procedures were correctly followed,” and that their “thoughts are with the woman’s family and friends.”

This situation is strange on a couple of levels
First of all, my thoughts are with the family and friends of the deceased, as I can’t imagine what an unpleasant situation this was for them. As I see it, there are two separate issues here — there’s the general question of what to do if someone passes away shortly after takeoff on a long haul flight, and then there’s the foul smell topic.
Indeed, procedures for handling deaths onboard do vary by airline, and there’s also some discretion, given that each case is different. Back in the day, Singapore Airlines’ Airbus A340-500s (now replaced by A350-900ULRs), which flew the world’s longest flights, had a special “closet” onboard in case someone passed away. However, that’s not something that you’ll otherwise find on commercial aircraft.
I don’t think there’s a right or wrong answer as to how to handle a situation like this. There’s obviously a balance between trying to operate punctually, trying to show respect toward the deceased and their family, and trying to avoid an unpleasant situation for other passengers.
Personally, it seems to me like storing a body in the galley for 13+ hours is not the ideal solution. We can argue about the merits of returning to Hong Kong if the person has already passed, though I think the proposal of storing the body in a lavatory was probably an all-around better way to handle this, and it’s how airlines usually handle this. But that’s just my take, and I don’t claim it’s right.
Now, regarding the “foul smell” and heated floors, that’s what confuses me most. A350s have heated floors in the galleys? Is this just something I never knew about? Or is the information there not quite correct, and did the heat from the galley ovens somehow cause issues?
I’m a little skeptical of the claims here, and I almost wonder if people may have imagined there was a foul smell, given that they knew what happened, when in reality that foul smell was something else (people do lots of smelly things on long haul flights!).

Bottom line
A 14-hour British Airways flight was a bit more eventful than planned, after a passenger onboard passed away around an hour after takeoff. While the pilots had reportedly recommended storing the body in a locked lavatory, the crew seemingly decided to store the body in the rear galley instead.
Passengers onboard claim that there started to be a foul smell toward the end of the flight, and question if this was the correct way to handle something like this. At least this handling sounds better than that Qatar Airways flight some time back, where a deceased person was placed in a seat next to a couple.
What do you make of the reported handling of this onboard passing?
The Airlines should have instructed the pilot to turn around and return back to HK or nearest countries
Not treat a deceased like a rag
You can't just unload a body in a random country. The only options are the origin or destination
If the woman died about an hour would it have not made more sense just to turn back?
Jared, what a pedant you are standing on legal procedure when the average cabin attendant (not to mention most other people with a few brain cells to rub together) is well able to deduce that a person is dead. Here's a few unsubtle clues from the dead pax: not breathing. unresponsive. no heartbeat. no pulse. falling body temp. no apparent objection to being manhandled from seat and laid out on floor for 13 hours. Tell...
Jared, what a pedant you are standing on legal procedure when the average cabin attendant (not to mention most other people with a few brain cells to rub together) is well able to deduce that a person is dead. Here's a few unsubtle clues from the dead pax: not breathing. unresponsive. no heartbeat. no pulse. falling body temp. no apparent objection to being manhandled from seat and laid out on floor for 13 hours. Tell us you're a fool without telling us you're a fool.
Who pronounced said person deceased? Usually a doctor or medical examiner needs to confirm biological death
It's pretty obvious in reality. A licensed professional can be called after landing.
Well smooth muscles stop functioning after death (including bladder and bowel), so things tend to get messy, and sometimes smelly.
I don't work A350s, but I've worked some 777s (and maybe other Boeing widebodies?) that have "floor heaters" which are vents in the back corners of the galley at about shin level that blow warm air. With the galley cart chillers on, it can get pretty cold back there so I think they help combat that.
We were on a jfk - Doha flight Qatar.
An elderly gentleman passed away 2 hours after take off
My son who is doctor . And another Dr tried to revive him for an hour - no response - died
They carried him and placed him in the last row of business class - for the remaining 12 hours only 1 row behind us with a blanket - but his face was exposed to appear as if he was sleeping
Terrible
Why not put the body in the crew rest area?
Sounds like the flight was absolutely full, so no option to leave in segregated seating. If people could be moved around, maybe the outboard space at rear of cabin where fuselage curves in but not space for seat. I've considered laying here for a nap before......
Think it should be a requirement for all long haul aircraft (distinguished by having a crew rest area?) to carry suitable 'body bags'. Crew rest might seem least of...
Sounds like the flight was absolutely full, so no option to leave in segregated seating. If people could be moved around, maybe the outboard space at rear of cabin where fuselage curves in but not space for seat. I've considered laying here for a nap before......
Think it should be a requirement for all long haul aircraft (distinguished by having a crew rest area?) to carry suitable 'body bags'. Crew rest might seem least of worst places to store, but appreciate access to these is probably impractical in this situation.
Sounds like there should be some ICAO protocol to land at suitable airfield to transfer body to appropriate storage (i.e. basic wooden caskets to be stored at international ports) and stow in cargo hold for completion of flight.
“segregated seating” you say?
That foul odor was just the usual BA nasty catering
Got’em!
'Imagine wrapping up a body, and then going back to serving people food and drinks."
It's just another day at the office, Ben.
From what I understand, lavatories are no longer used to store the deceased as the body enters rigor mortis, which can prevent the emergency services removing the body and thus taking the plane out of service until they can remove parts of the plane's cabin to get the body out.
Yes A350s have heated galley floors.
Isn’t this what Club Suites were designed for? Shut the door and forget about it…..
Having worked 40 years in the Industry there has to be a better way. Unfortunately Passengers do get sick onboard and on ocassion pass away like this Female Passenger. There are a limited number of bathrooms onboard and with a flight duration of that length, I think stowing the corpse in a blocked off bathroom would be the BEST solution provided there was some type of plastic liner (heavy duty refuse bag commonly used on...
Having worked 40 years in the Industry there has to be a better way. Unfortunately Passengers do get sick onboard and on ocassion pass away like this Female Passenger. There are a limited number of bathrooms onboard and with a flight duration of that length, I think stowing the corpse in a blocked off bathroom would be the BEST solution provided there was some type of plastic liner (heavy duty refuse bag commonly used on International segments to place the body in prior to securing it in the bathroom. With pressurization onboard, no sign of life and no respiration, Without knowing how a corpse would respond over that period of time (13 hours) protective measures would need to be taken for the release of bodily fluids which happens after death. Placing a passenger In a Seat would not be something I would care to do nor would stowing in a Gallery area where food and beverage items are stored for a planeload of people. Diversions are expensive for the Airline. Off loading a corpse and the Family Members is traumatic and disruptive, not to mention the Local Authorities would not just let you do it and proceed On in a timely matter. Unfortunate situation and my heart goes out to the Crew who had to deal with this situation and the Family of the deceased that had to witness it.
Where did you (not) learn capitalization?
I remember Singapore's A345s had a dedicated cupboard for this kind of situation.
Anyone see that cupboard? What’d it look like?
Airbus planes can have heated floors in the galleys due to the colder temperature from the doors
Usually the body is left at the seat, covered by a blanket. It cannot be moved. Police and medics attend on arrival. If possible, reseat customers seated adjacent.
Please stay of Gary’s lane, Ben
I’m interested in stories like this. Carry on. It’s part of the wider world or air travel.
Agreed, and as aircraft are built with ever more range and flights get longer and longer, it's not a problem that's going away.
Bah! 100% VFTW! The National Enquirer of commercial aviation!