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Afghan Teen’s Risky Flight Escape Rekindles Memories of Punjab Brothers’ Tragic Stowaway Journey

By Manisha Sahu, America News World
September 24, 2025

When a 13-year-old Afghan boy managed to reach New Delhi by hiding inside the wheel well of a plane flying from Kabul, the Bizarre adventure drew global attention. His act of youthful curiosity not only shocked aviation and security officials but also revived haunting memories of a tragic case from nearly three decades ago, when two brothers from India’s Punjab attempted a similar journey to London—only one survived.

The Afghan Teen’s Daring Attempt

The Afghan teenager, hailing from Kunduz, was spotted almost immediately after the aircraft landed at Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport. Security agencies were stunned at the audacity of the boy, who reportedly carried nothing more than a small portable speaker for the perilous two-hour journey.

He told Indian officials he was not seeking asylum, nor attempting to escape war. Instead, he claimed he was simply “curious” about air travel and wanted to see if he could make the journey undetected. Authorities quickly assessed him as posing no security threat and sent him back to Afghanistan within hours.

The boy’s seemingly reckless yet relatively harmless attempt reminded many of a much more tragic stowaway story from the 1990s—one that highlighted both desperation and the deadly risks of hiding in the wheel well of a passenger jet.

“Back in 1996, the Saini brothers stowed away in the front wheel well of a British Airways plane flying from Delhi to London. (Reuters/Representative image)”



Flashback to 1996: The Saini Brothers’ Fatal Gamble

In October 1996, Pardeep Saini, 23, and his younger brother Vijay, 19, made a fateful decision. Both worked as car mechanics in India but dreamed of better lives abroad, particularly in London’s Southall, a community with a large Punjabi diaspora. At a time when militancy in Punjab had left many young men disillusioned and opportunities were scarce, the brothers pinned their hopes on escaping to the UK—even without visas or sufficient funds.

Lured by an unscrupulous agent in Delhi, the brothers were told that sneaking into a plane’s wheel well would provide access to the baggage hold, a supposed “easy method” to reach London. They paid £150 for this false advice. Under the cover of night, they crawled onto the runway and into the wheel bay of a British Airways Boeing 747 bound for Heathrow.

A Journey Through Freezing Hell

The Boeing 747 carried more than 300 passengers in relative comfort, but the Saini brothers were clinging to survival in the freezing, oxygen-starved confines of the undercarriage. At 10,000 meters, temperatures plummeted to minus 60 degrees Celsius, and hurricane-force winds battered their frail cotton clothing.

“The noise was terrible,” Pardeep later recalled. “As the wheels came up, they were glowing hot. They were burning us.”

Moments later, the freezing conditions set in. The brothers were separated in the wheel compartment, and Pardeep soon lost track of his sibling. He passed out shortly after takeoff, slipping into what doctors later described as a state of suspended animation.

Tragically, Vijay did not survive. His body fell nearly 2,000 feet during the plane’s descent into Heathrow and was discovered days later in Surrey.

Survival Against All Odds

Afghan teen unbelievable flight escape.



Pardeep’s survival was nothing short of miraculous. Ground staff at Heathrow found him stumbling on the tarmac, barely alive. He was detained, treated, and later described by doctors as a “medical anomaly” for having endured conditions that should have been fatal.

Captain Michael Post, who piloted the ill-fated flight for the brothers, even wrote to Pardeep afterward, congratulating him: “I hope that in the future I may have the pleasure of carrying you as a legitimate passenger on the INSIDE of the aeroplane.”

But survival brought little peace. Pardeep was tormented for years by violent nightmares, often waking up calling for his lost brother. “Some days he feels lucky,” his uncle Tarsem Singh Bola told reporters at the time. “But then he realizes the agony that luck has brought. Then he feels he might as well have died too.”

Initially, British authorities rejected Pardeep’s plea for asylum. However, public sympathy grew, and community leaders—including politicians of Indian origin—campaigned for his case. Eventually, he was granted residency on compassionate grounds after a prolonged legal battle.

Reports suggest that he later settled in London, found work at Heathrow Airport, and built a modest life for himself. Today, he would be in his 50s, though his current whereabouts remain unknown.

Two Stories, One Warning

The Afghan teenager’s curious adventure and the Saini brothers’ desperate gamble, though separated by nearly 30 years, highlight the extreme risks of stowing away in aircraft wheel bays. Aviation experts stress that survival in such conditions is almost impossible due to a lethal combination of freezing temperatures, lack of oxygen, and crushing mechanical forces.

While the Afghan boy was fortunate to endure a short flight from Kabul to Delhi, the tragic fate of Vijay Saini serves as a stark reminder of the dangers of misplaced hope and desperation.

As migration pressures and global conflicts continue to push vulnerable individuals toward dangerous choices, these incidents underscore a sobering truth: the sky offers no safe passage for those clinging to the undercarriage of modern aviation.

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