UK Jet2 staff leave size 12 mum in tears after asking 'personal question' before flight



The 37-year-old was going to board the early morning flight from Edinburgh Airport with her parents and three-year-old daughter.

A Scots mum claims she was left in tears while boarding a flight to Ibiza with her family due to a member of Jet2 staff asking a personal question.

Claire King. from Fife, was heading away on holiday for the first time in 11 years on June 7 when she was allegedly taken to one side by a male member of staff and asked if she 'was expecting'.

The 37-year-old who is a size 12 was going to board the early morning flight from Edinburgh Airport with her parents and three-year-old daughter.

She said the bus was 'packed' when she got on with her family before she spotted the staff member, who'd checked her passport at the boarding gate, walking towards her.

The patient care advisor, who's a size 12-14, claims he ushered her off the bus and 'looked her up and down' before asking her if she was 'expecting'.

Claire burst into tears before boarding the plane, claiming it 'put a dampener' on the holiday. The mum-of-one was wearing a t-shirt and floaty trousers and says she's since 'studied herself' in the mirror wearing the same clothes and doesn't think she looks pregnant.

After having four miscarriages before conceiving her daughter, Claire says no woman should be asked the question if there is any doubt whether she is pregnant or not.

Jet2 have apologised to Claire and said sometimes their teams are 'required to ask customers questions for health and safety reasons before a flight' and the colleague involved 'will undergo retraining to ensure this does not happen again'.

Claire said: "He pulled me over and he said he'd been asked by his manager to come over and ask me if I was expecting. At the same time he kind of looked me up and down.

"I looked at him in complete disbelief because it wasn't a question that I expected to come out of his mouth. I just stared at him and it was almost like I was speechless.

"I didn't really know what to say. At that point I turned around and I was like 'is that a serious question?' He just looked at me and put his hands up and was like 'okay, that's all I needed to know. Enjoy your holiday', and walked away.

"We were still standing there in disbelief looking at each other as if to be like 'what the hell just happened, what was that?'.

"We were escorted back to the bus. The doors closed and as we started to drive up towards the plane, I could feel myself welling up. I could feel myself getting emotional. I started crying before we'd even got on the plane.

"He gave no reasoning. There was no explanation given as to why he even asked that question, what prompted the question, or how he came to that conclusion.

"He said that he has been asked by his manager to come down - whether that is true I have no idea, I've got no evidence to confirm that."

After giving birth to her daughter three years ago, Claire says she 'carries a bit of timber', but is grateful for her body which gave her 'the greatest gift'.

Claire said: "For me personally I'm not happy with my body but I'm beyond happy that it's given me the greatest gift that I could ask for.

"At the same time it was my first holiday in 11 years, it was my daughter's first holiday, you do have that self-conscious awareness of yourself and your own body.

"I was about to put my body into a swimsuit, perhaps into tighter fitting clothes, you do have that doubt. But for somebody to then come up and ask you that question, it does just make you think 'do I really look like that? Is that how I look?'.

"It rocks your self confidence and for the first couple of days of the holiday I was very aware and it did put a dampener on the start of it which was not how this holiday was meant to be."

If there are any doubts that a woman is pregnant, Claire says the question shouldn't be asked.

She added: "I think that for any woman whether you can conceive naturally, struggle to conceive or you need a little bit of help, or your decision is that you just don't want children, it doesn't really matter.

"There are woman out there who sadly and unfortunately do struggle to conceive or maybe they've just made the decision that they don't want children. For me I did struggle to conceive my child, I'd gone through four miscarriages before I had her.

"I've now made the decision that I don't want any more children for that simple reason and also because I have the greatest gift that I could ask for. Nobody knows behind the scenes what's going on with other women - you never know what the background story is.

"It's the principle of being asked that question indefinitely by anybody. If you're unsure whether a woman is pregnant or not you just shouldn't ask that question."

A Jet2 spokesman said: "We would like to reiterate our sincere apologies to Ms King, which our team have also done directly.

"The colleague in question is aware that this was not handled in an appropriate manner and is undergoing retraining to ensure it does not happen again.

"Whilst our teams might sometimes be required to ask customers questions for health and safety reasons before a flight, they are trained to handle this in an appropriate manner, and we recognise that this did not happen on this isolated occasion."
 
"It's the principle of being asked that question indefinitely by anybody. If you're unsure whether a woman is pregnant or not you just shouldn't ask that question."
she does understand that you arent supposed to fly while highly pregnant?
 
We wouldn't have to ask such personal questions if people hadn't weaponized their personal foibles through lawfare to the point that not asking those questions is a liability risk.
 
She's definitely doing it for money. Tabloids like the Sun, Daily Record etc can pay £250-£350 for stories as well as gain publicity and sympathy for a crowdfund.

Just a couple days ago a 12 year old British schoolgirl and her Father have made over £10,000. She wore a Union Jack dress on her school's diversity day, got into trouble for it (since diversity day is about celebrating other cultures). Her Father ran to the Daily Mail who made little Miss middle class into a victim who now needs lots of money from everyone for some reason.

Earlier this year a racist prick got fired from Waitrose for being racist on Twitter, also the same Twitter account he was using for his work (thus bringing them into disrepute giving them legal grounds to fire him). Last time I checked he had over £25,000 on his gofundme for "not being allowed his free speech".

It's vile. There are people in Britain homeless and in poverty not getting shit. The far right tabloids in Britain make sure already rich racists and fat fucks are seen as victims and continue to get more money though.

For real, this is the fucking state of Britain right now

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Size 12 is hardly fat, it's about average.

I can see the arguments from both sides - if she was close to her due date, flying on a plane is a definite no-no, but the question could maybe have been asked in a better and more polite way.
 
she does understand that you arent supposed to fly while highly pregnant?
Yes but she doesn’t look highly pregnant. Shes a 14 or so, which sadly is average these days.
She’s overweight, but not massive, and nobody looking at her would think she’s in her third trimester and past the cut off for flights. I had to fly for work fairly late in one pregnancy and there was no hiding it (not that I would have.) by that point it’s blindingly obvious you are. I had to take my notes with me to prove I wasn’t likely to pop out an anchor baby on US soil.
I just don’t see any reason why they’d ask her - she’s very clearly not late stage pregnancy. Weird story.
 
DARLING, HOLD MY HAND!!!

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