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Fire Under Latam Jet Forces Emergency Slide Evacuation At Guarulhos
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
A baggage-belt fire beside a Latam A320 forced an emergency evacuation at São Paulo's main international airport, with no injuries.
Passenger videos turned the incident into a viral case study in how Brazilian crews, airports and contractors handle real emergencies.
The episode exposes both Brazil's strong safety culture and the tension between professional operators and noisy anti-business politics.
The passengers on Latam flight LA3418 thought they were starting a routine night hop from São Paulo to Porto Alegre.
Then smoke rose from the baggage equipment under the Airbus A320, alarms sounded, and a calm boarding turned into a shouted order to evacuate. Within seconds, crew were sending people down the emergency slides as firefighters rushed to the aircraft.
Inside the cabin, instinct clashed with safety training. Many reached for laptops and backpacks until flight attendants yelled for everyone to drop their bags and move.
At the back of the aircraft, a young crew member reportedly broke internal protocol to open the rear slide because a colleague at the front was blocked, choosing passenger safety over paperwork.
Influencer and accountant Lucas Lima, known online as“contador revoltado”, filmed the confusion and the evacuation, then shared the clips on social media.
His suitcase was burned, but he later praised Latam 's staff as fast, professional and calm. The airline rebooked most of the 169 passengers on a replacement flight to Porto Alegre and gave food vouchers while they waited.
Behind the drama on the tarmac lies a bigger story. Brazil has seen a handful of ground incidents of this kind, including a 2019 belt fire and a 2024 cargo-hold blaze, all without casualties.
The pattern suggests procedures, training and co-ordination between private operators and airport authorities are working, even when outsourced equipment fails.
A baggage-belt fire beside a Latam A320 forced an emergency evacuation at São Paulo's main international airport, with no injuries.
Passenger videos turned the incident into a viral case study in how Brazilian crews, airports and contractors handle real emergencies.
The episode exposes both Brazil's strong safety culture and the tension between professional operators and noisy anti-business politics.
The passengers on Latam flight LA3418 thought they were starting a routine night hop from São Paulo to Porto Alegre.
Then smoke rose from the baggage equipment under the Airbus A320, alarms sounded, and a calm boarding turned into a shouted order to evacuate. Within seconds, crew were sending people down the emergency slides as firefighters rushed to the aircraft.
Inside the cabin, instinct clashed with safety training. Many reached for laptops and backpacks until flight attendants yelled for everyone to drop their bags and move.
At the back of the aircraft, a young crew member reportedly broke internal protocol to open the rear slide because a colleague at the front was blocked, choosing passenger safety over paperwork.
Influencer and accountant Lucas Lima, known online as“contador revoltado”, filmed the confusion and the evacuation, then shared the clips on social media.
His suitcase was burned, but he later praised Latam 's staff as fast, professional and calm. The airline rebooked most of the 169 passengers on a replacement flight to Porto Alegre and gave food vouchers while they waited.
Behind the drama on the tarmac lies a bigger story. Brazil has seen a handful of ground incidents of this kind, including a 2019 belt fire and a 2024 cargo-hold blaze, all without casualties.
The pattern suggests procedures, training and co-ordination between private operators and airport authorities are working, even when outsourced equipment fails.
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