In Britain, a woman tried to open the door of an airplane in flight: she was convicted
In the UK, a woman was sentenced to 2 years in prison. Last year, she tried to open the door of an airplane during a flight and shouted, "I'm going to kill you all."
The 26-year-old freak is called Chloe Hein, reports Sky News . The incident occurred on board a Jet2 flight on June 22, 2019.
By the way: In the USA, the plane urgently landed because the passenger took off his pants from the stewart In the USA, the plane urgently landed because a passenger took off his pants from a stewart
The plane followed from Stansted Airport to Turkish Dalaman. Halfway, Haines suddenly began to fight the cabin crew and tried to open the door. Due to the incident, 2 British Air Force fighters were alerted to meet Jet2 flight and escort him back to the airport.
How Haynes explained her behavior
During the trial, Chloe Hein explained that she was not in herself and did not remember what actually happened. The woman claims that during the flight she mixed alcohol and medicine.
At the same time, the woman admitted that she had endangered the safety of the plane and attacked a crew member who prevented her from opening the door of the plane.
Those who are trapped in the confined space of an aircraft will inevitably be frightened by the actions of those who, while intoxicated, threaten their lives. For some, this will be the worst nightmare, the
judge said.
Note that the incident cost the airline Jet2 86 thousand pounds (this is about 2 million 734 thousand hryvnias).
Coronavirus infemia: who and why lies about the Chinese strain
The World Health Organization (WHO) is sounding the alarm: the world is facing a new, terrible pandemic. But this is not at all about the Chinese epidemic of coronavirus - at least not directly.

Did you receive a package from China via AliExpress? You should not be so scared, you can safely take it in your hands. Vaccination against pneumonia? Unfortunately, it will not help against the new coronavirus . Maybe you just have to eat garlic to prevent the latest plague? Some amount of garlic of the body will only benefit, but whether it protects against the mainstream Chinese virus - you can not say for sure, there is no data.
Dear readers, probably think that this excited fantasy of the author invented such strange questions and answers to them? No way. These questions and answers are cited from the World Health Organization (WHO) website. In a new column called myth busters, Channel 24, experts at this venerable UN unit are trying to disprove as much of the various rumors as they can about the new Chinese coronavirus strain . Because rumors, false information and conspiracy theories spread much faster than the virus itself.
In late 2019, an epidemic of a new virus, codenamed 2019nCoV, began in China - it is the direct "relative" of the deadly Sars virus. He is currently infected with thousands of people, not only in the Chinese city of Wuhan, not only within China's borders, but around the world. Hundreds have died, some have recovered, and some of those who have overcome the disease have fallen ill again. As the causative agent of this disease was unknown last year, and the epidemic's effects cannot be even estimated and predicted yet, the need for information about it in the world has proven to be very great. The Google Trends Internet Inquiry System found that in January 2020, a Google search for the coronavirus keyword was a worldwide trend. This request for information was not left unanswered: Over the last four weeks, more than 15 million posts have been written on the social network Twitter, and new messages and analyzes are published daily in the world media. It is through so much variety of informationWHO also introduced the definition of "infodemia" - an avalanche of messages, both truthful and fictional .
Is the world coronavirus pandemic threatening?

Kitchen of Infodemia
In fact, events in the information space that can currently be observed in connection with the coronavirus are not something new and unheard of. They are like other bursts of fake information related to other "hot" topics - from terrorist attacks to plane crashes: first, something terrible and bad happens, then social networks just minutes later are swept through an array of information - whether true or not. and then the world media are already "turned on". People read posts or articles and look for more information, with more than one source to confirm. But, as official sources are always a little bit, but they are too late to react - there is room for rumors, for false information and for conspiracy theories. This effect is amplified by the fact thatthe level of "information content" (in this case, regarding the coronavirus) is constantly changing, and what seems indisputable and accurate today may be refuted tomorrow.