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Appears in Newsflare picks
00:18
Angry passenger throws power bank to ground when airport staff stop him from boarding
This is the shocking moment an angry passenger hurled a power bank to the ground after being stopped from boarding a flight.
Footage shows the furious traveller, wearing a backpack, throwing the portable charger at the security checkpoint of Terminal T3 at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport in Hubei, China.
Reports said the man was informed during the security check that the equipment he was carrying did not comply with relevant regulations and could not be brought on board.
The passenger allegedly engaged in a heated argument with the inspector before slamming the charging device to the ground, causing it to emit smoke and catch fire.
Airport personnel quickly extinguished the blaze.
The traveller was sentenced to five days of administrative detention for disturbing public order on July 16.
On June 27, the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) issued a notice banning passengers from carrying power banks without China Compulsory Certification (3C) safety markings.
The measure applies to all travellers boarding flights in the country and aims to prevent dangerous incidents involving lithium battery products.
The CAAC had previously prohibited passengers and crew from carrying power banks with a rated energy capacity above 160Wh, a rule aligned with International Air Transport Association (IATA) guidelines, which limit spare lithium batteries to under 160 watt-hours and require airline approval for those between 100–160Wh.
However, the new regulations add the requirement that all power banks must bear 3C safety certification marks, clearly visible and intact. Devices with missing, tampered, or faded labels will be confiscated.
Lithium batteries, like those embedded in power banks, have been linked to numerous fire-related emergencies on planes.
When a lithium battery fails, it can undergo thermal runaway, a rapid, violent reaction in which one or more cells rupture. This process releases toxic, flammable, and explosive gases, creating an intense, self-sustaining fire that is extremely difficult to extinguish in flight.
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