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Toronto transatlantic flight makes emergency landing in Scotland
Summary
A KLM Amsterdam–Toronto flight declared an emergency and landed in Glasgow because of a reported medical issue; it later departed Glasgow and arrived in Toronto without further incident.
Content
A KLM Royal Dutch Airlines transatlantic flight from Amsterdam to Toronto declared an emergency an hour into its journey and diverted to Glasgow on Thursday. Flight tracking shows the Boeing 777 circled above Lanarkshire before landing at Glasgow Airport. Local reports said the crew likely set transponder code 7700, a general emergency signal. The airline told local media the diversion was for a medical emergency and the aircraft later resumed its trip to Toronto.
Known details:
- KLM flight KL691 departed Amsterdam Airport Schiphol at about 2 p.m. local time and diverted roughly an hour into the flight to land at Glasgow Airport.
- FlightAware data shows the aircraft circled over Lanarkshire prior to landing.
- Local outlets reported the crew likely used Squawk 7700, which signals a general emergency that can indicate medical or technical issues.
- KLM confirmed to local media the diversion was for a medical emergency; the plane left Glasgow at 4:15 p.m. and arrived in Toronto at 5:43 p.m. local time following the continued journey.
Summary:
The flight was diverted because of a reported medical emergency, landed safely in Glasgow, and later continued to Toronto where it arrived without further incident. Undetermined at this time.
