Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

WestJet Passengers Describe Emergency Evacuation As Police Investigate Threat

The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2015 09:03 PM
    Police were trying to determine Tuesday if three threats to flights in one week were related as passengers from an evacuated WestJet plane described their ordeal.
     
    Manitoba RCMP Sgt. Bert Paquet said the latest threat Monday night involved Flight WS422, which was diverted to Winnipeg en route from Edmonton to Toronto. He wouldn't specify the nature of the threat.
     
    "(The threat) came from outside the plane or the flight itself and we are looking to establish the origin of the call and the person responsible for it," he said Tuesday.
     
    The plane, passengers and baggage were searched by explosive experts and an RCMP canine unit, Paquet said. Nothing suspicious was found.
     
    WestJet said the six passengers who were hurt sustained minor injuries. All 54 passengers and five crew on the flight were evacuated from the plane shortly after landing, the company said.
     
    "The flight crew, in conjunction with our Operations Control Centre, made the decision to divert the aircraft to Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport," Robert Palmer, a spokesman for the company, said in an emailed statement.
     
    "In order to evacuate the aircraft as quickly as possible, the crew made the decision to deploy the emergency evacuation slides...A number were taken to hospital for further treatment accompanied by members of WestJet's Special Assistance Team."
     
    The passengers were put up in hotels and arrived Tuesday in Toronto, describing the scene.
     
    People moved quickly but "everybody was pretty cool," said Murray Hill of Midland, Ont., who used the slide at the back of the plane.
     
    The crew decided to deploy the slides instead of wait for stair cars to unload passengers, Hill said, but not all passengers used the slide, choosing instead to jump off the wing of the plane. Some of the people who jumped were among those injured, he said.
     
    While "concerned" about the situation, Hill said he was eager to give the slide a try.
     
    "I was excited about it. I said 'I've seen this on TV, I can do this,'" he said after landing in Toronto.
     
     
    Ben, who didn't want to give his last name, said it "was a bit of a scramble."
     
    "We got off the plane, there was no slide or anything we just jumped off the wings," he said. 
     
    The WestJet incident is the third threat involving a flight in the last week. RCMP were working with other police agencies to determine if the incidents are related, Paquet said.
     
    A WestJet flight from Edmonton to Halifax landed in Saskatoon after a threat Saturday morning.
     
    Police said a call had been made claiming an explosive device was on board, but the report turned out to be false.
     
    Last Thursday, St. John's International Airport was temporarily closed because of a bomb threat on an Air Canada flight.
     
    The airport authority said it took the action after Air Canada Flight 143 departing from St. John's to Ottawa was notified about a possible bomb on board as the aircraft was pulling back from the gate.
     
    Royal Newfoundland Constabulary spokesman Steve Curnew said Friday that the flight was about to leave when a note identified as a possible bomb threat was found in one of the plane's washrooms.
     
    Nothing suspicious was found in a search of the plane.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey
    Five things to know about the drug-fuelled turf war in Surrey, B.C. and the Surrey Wrap Project that aims to prevent gangs from growing:

    Gang Violence: Five Things To Know About The Conflict Over Drugs And Territory In Surrey

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around
    SURREY, B.C. — When Rob Rai and the Surrey School District opened the Wrap Project in 2009, those starting the dedicated anti-gang program plainly acknowledged that groups of local teenagers were committing serious crimes.

    Surrey Gang Violence: How A Teenaged Drug Dealer, Robber And Bad Daughter Turned Their Lives Around

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges
    National Defence is one of five federal agencies covered by a 2010 government framework policy that allows officials to seek and share information from foreign partners, even when it may put someone at risk of brutal treatment.

    National Defence Delay On Torture Directive Delay Suggests Internal Challenges

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know
    Tensions over Canada and Russia's Arctic territorial ambitions have been brewing since at least February 2009, when Canada scrambled F-18 fighter jets to intercept Russian bombers approaching Canadian airspace, then loudly publicized the incident

    Canada And Russia's Deteriorating Relationship: 5 Things To Know

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land
    About 23,000 people live on roughly 10,000 hectares of lush green fields flanked by islands and rivers that make up the territory about 150 kilometres west of Montreal.

    Big Decisions For Akwesasne Mohawks After Ottawa Offers $240 Million For Land

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control
    When the heads of the world's major news agencies sat down a year ago with Vladimir Putin at a St. Petersburg palace, they were treated to a long, sumptuous meal of Crimean flounder, a dish evidently chosen not only for its delicacy but for the political statement.

    Midnight In The Presidential Library With Putin: An Exercise In Control