To Europe, suspended by the wheels of an airplane … Kabica reveals the secret of the “flight of madness”



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A young South African revealed in a documentary the details of his “crazy adventure”, after traveling from Johannesburg in South Africa to Heathrow in Great Britain, while hiding near the wheels of the plane.

Themba Kabica, 30, recently spoke about his 11-hour journey and his friend Carlito Valle’s fall from 5,000 feet to his death a horrible death.

The British newspaper “Daily Star” quoted Kabica as saying that during his trip he suffered from lack of oxygen and spent months in a coma, before waking up and being shocked by the news of his friend’s death.

According to the newspaper, Carlito fell a minute before the landing of a British Airways flight, which was supposed to land at Heathrow, in July 2015.

Kabika recounted the details of his “dangerous” affair with his friend in a documentary titled “The Man Who Fell from the Sky”, and his identity was revealed to the public for the first time since the accident.

In the documentary, Kabica provides detailed information about him and his partner planning their “illegal” trip to Britain, and how he hid in the plane’s wheel well.

“I was watching the earth recede little by little and I began to feel short of breath, and the last I remember is what my friend Carlito told me that we have achieved it,” said Kabica.

Kabika mentioned the details of his planning and his partner for the trip as they stayed in a camp near the Johannesburg airport, adding: “We jumped the airport fence at night and hid while we waited for a plane ready to take off. , excluding those traveling to the United States for the long distance. “

“It was difficult for us to put pressure on ourselves with the plane’s wheel well. We were scared when the engine started, but we made the decision not to back down. We had to leave Africa to stay alive,” Kabica said.

Kabica passed out from lack of oxygen and woke up after the plane landed on the runway, and spent six months in a coma, still using crutches from his injuries, which left him unable to work.

It should be noted that Kabica obtained permission to remain in Britain after his survival and applied for asylum.

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