Black woman says Delta moved her to back of plane for white passengers

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Black woman says Delta moved her to back of plane for white passengers
By
Yaron Steinbuch
March 1, 2022 11:18am
Updated

MORE ON:DELTA AIRLINES
A black woman has accused Delta Air Lines of discrimination after a flight attendant allegedly asked her to move to the back of a plane to make room for two white women.
Camille Henderson said she was sitting near row 15 window during a Feb. 3 flight from Atlanta to San Francisco when the women, who were sitting in the aisle and middle seats in the row next to her, said they had first-class tickets, ABC 7 reported.
“They felt like they were ticketed first-class seats, but they couldn’t provide the tickets,” Henderson told the news outlet, adding that the women continued the complaints for over an hour.
Henderson recorded part of the exchange between the women and a flight attendant.
“Unfortunately, my first-class seats are occupied,” one women is heard saying, according to a recording obtained by ABC 7.

“They are what?” another person is heard saying.

“They’re occupied,” the woman answered.
Camille Henderson.Camille Henderson claims she was asked to move to the back of a plane to make room for two white women.ABC 7Delta planes.“Delta has no tolerance for discrimination in any form,” a rep for the airline stated.Yuki Iwamura/AFP via Getty Images
Henderson told the station that flight attendants then came up with a solution to give the women more space at her expense.
“Are you flying by yourself?” a person is heard asking Henderson, who replies that she is.
“There’s a seat back there in aisle 34. It’s an aisle seat,” the apparent attendant says.
Henderson, who said the crew did not ask the women to move, agreed reluctantly to go to the back row, according to the outlet.
Camille Henderson.“In an attempt to accommodate [the women], they basically made me have to move,” Camille Henderson recalls.ABC 7
“I don’t want to make it a race thing, but instead of asking the two white women that were seated next to me (to move), in an attempt to accommodate them, they basically made me have to move,” she told ABC 7.
“I just don’t know why I had to move because that was the seat that I paid for, that was my assigned seat,” she added. “As I’m walking back there it’s just humiliating. It’s like having the entire flight look at you and asking what’s going on.”
Henderson said she was unsatisfied with what a Delta customer service rep she finally reached on the phone told her.
“How were you humiliated for them to ask you to go to another seat?” the person can be heard asking in a recording she provided to the outlet — suggesting that there was no inconvenience since she was moved to another seat in economy.
“You’re basically saying there’s nothing that you can do?” she told the rep.
Call with Delta rep.Camille Henderson told a Delta rep that the whole ordeal was “humiliating.”ABC 7
“No, not under these circumstances that I’m showing, ma’am,” the person was heard replying.
An airline spokesperson told ABC7 in a statement: “We are looking into this situation to better understand what happened.
“Delta has no tolerance for discrimination in any form and these allegations run counter to our deeply held values of respecting and honoring the diversity of our customers,” the rep added.
Henderson vowed to never fly Delta again.





“Me, as a black woman, I was displaced to make two white women comfortable. That doesn’t make any sense to me,” she told the outlet.
 
NEWS
Sky News correspondent shot while covering Ukraine invasion
By
Natalie O'Neill
March 4, 2022 7:37pm
Updated



MORE ON:UKRAINE WAR
A Sky News journalist was wounded in a terrifying gunfire ambush while covering Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine, he said in a report Friday.
Chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay and his team came under fire by Russian attackers near a Kyiv checkpoint as they tried to leave the city Monday.
“Our world turned upside down,” Ramsay wrote in a first-person account of the attack. “I do recall wondering if my death was going to be painful.”
He said he first heard a small explosion and felt a tire on the vehicle he was riding in pop, causing it to roll to a stop on a desolate street.
Suddenly, bullets began pelting the windshield of the vehicle, forcing the team of five to duck for cover.
“We were under full attack,” Ramsay wrote. “Bullets cascaded through the whole of the car, tracers, bullet flashes, windscreen glass, plastic seats, the steering wheel and dashboard had disintegrated.
The reporters were at a checkpoint outside Kyiv.The reporters were at a checkpoint outside Kyiv.Sky NewsA barrage of bullets were unloaded on the car.A barrage of bullets were unloaded on the car.Sky NewsChief correspondent Stuart Ramsay and his team came under fire by Russian attackers.Chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay and his team came under fire by Russian attackers.Sky News
“It was professional, the rounds kept smashing into the car — they didn’t miss,” he added.
Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with The Post’s live coverage.
Ramsay had been heading toward the town of Bucha, roughly 30 miles from Kyiv —where a Russian convoy had previously been destroyed by the Ukrainian army — when a saboteur Russian reconnaissance squad opened fire, he said.
A man walks past destroyed military vehicles on a street, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 1, 2022.A Sky News team was shot at by Russian soldiers on their way to Bucha, Ukraine.REUTERS/Serhii Nuzhnenko
Ramsay and the others shouted that they were journalists, but “the rounds kept coming,” he wrote.
As he prepared to run toward a 40-foot embankment, he was struck in the lower back by a bullet.
“I’ve been hit!” he shouted, then fell face-first into the embankment.
No reporters were killed in the incident.No reporters were killed in the incident.Sky News
Camera operator Richie Mockler also took two non-fatal rounds to his body armor, he said.
“At the bottom [of the embankment], we regrouped. The five of us were alive. We couldn’t believe it,” he wrote.
Using a concrete wall as cover, the journalists sprinted into a nearby factory unit and then waited for rescue.
A map shows where Russian forces have attacked cities and towns in Ukraine.Russian forces have launched continuous airstrikes on towns surrounding the capital city of Kyiv.NY Post Illustration
A day later, they made it back to the center of Kyiv, said Ramsay, who did not elaborate on his injury.





“We were very lucky. But thousands of Ukrainians are dying, and families are being targeted by Russian hit squads just as we were, driving along in a family saloon and attacked,” he wrote. “This war gets worse by the day.”
 
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