British low-cost airline fined €60,000 for refusing to allow man to board for ‘security’ reasons

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

A French court on Thursday fined British low-cost airline easyJet €60,000 (£52,000) for having refused to allow a disabled passenger to board for “security” reasons.

The criminal court in Bayonne, southern France, heard that staff at the budget carrier refused to allow Joseph Etcheveste, 55, to board an Easyjet flight in Biarritz in July 2010 because he was “unaccompanied”.

“EasyJet refused to let my client board because it deemed there were security problems. They still have not been able to explain what they were,” said his lawyer Anne-Marie Mendiboure.

It was not the first time easyJet has fallen foul of French discrimination laws.

In December 2015 the company was fined €70,000 for refusing access to three people with disabilities for the same reasons.

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There were also similar rulings in the two previous years.

The airline said it had merely imposed “internal rules”.

Etcheveste was an associate of former Basque separatist leader Philippe Bidart and was partially paralysed when he was shot in the spine as he was being arrested by French police in 1987.

EasyJet lawyer Maud Marian told AFP she was not surprised at the court judgement while stressing that the airline “never intended to discriminate against the plaintiff” and was unlikely to appeal the decision.