LONDON (AP) — Police believe he was from Africa, probably from Angola, but they don't know his identity.
The mystery began in September
when residents of a suburban street in the Mortlake neighborhood of West
London woke up on a quiet Sunday morning to find the crumpled body of a
black man on the sidewalk of Portman Avenue, near a convenience store,
an upscale lingerie shop and a storefront offering Chinese medical
cures.
Detectives believed at first the
man was a murder victim and cordoned off the area. Within a day,
however, police concluded the man — probably already dead — had fallen
to the ground when a jet passing overhead lowered its landing gear as it
neared the runway at nearby Heathrow Airport.
The apparent stowaway had no
identification papers — just some currency from Angola, leading police
to surmise that he was from that African nation, especially as inquiries
showed that a plane from Angola was beginning its descent into Heathrow
at about that time.
"You could see him, his body was contorted," she said. "It was a beautiful blue day, really sunny, but we had to keep the children inside. I didn't want the children to see, and to have to explain to them and put fear into them every time a plane goes over."
A post mortem conducted two days after the body landed listed the cause of death as "multiple injuries."
In the days afterward, some
neighbors put flowers on the spot where the stowaway was found, and a
small group of Angolans who live in the London area came to place more
flowers and to pray. Lambert, 41, said there is lingering sadness, since
the man has not been identified and there has been no way to tell his
family he is gone.
"I felt, what was he running away
from? What made him think he could he could? And how will his family
ever know? He's a lost soul now; his father and mother are probably
waiting for him to make contact," she said.
A London police spokesman, who
wasn't authorized to speak on the record because of force policy, said
Sunday that police are appealing to the public for help identifying the
man based on a composite image of his face and a photo of a tattoo on
his left arm. The tattoo showed the letters "Z'' and "G'' inked on his
upper arm, with a horizontal line through the "Z''.
In a statement, police said the man is believed to be an African of slight build between the ages of 20 and 30. He was wearing jeans, white sneakers and a gray sweatshirt when he was found on Sept. 9, police said.
Although firm figures are not
available, in recent years there has been a rise in the number of
stowaways trying to get to Western Europe by hiding in the
undercarriages of passenger planes.
Aviation safety specialist Chris
Yates of Yates Consulting said Sunday that poor airport perimeter
security at a number of airports in Africa — including the main Angola
airport at Luanda — and in other parts of the world has made it easier
for people to stow away on planes, but that most attempts fail.
"They so often end in fatality
because more often than not stowaways climb into the wheel base or cargo
hold, and those areas are not necessarily pressurized," he said. "When
you start moving beyond 10,000 feet, oxygen starvation becomes a
reality. As you climb up to altitude, the issue becomes cold as well,
the temperature drops to minus 40 or minus 50 degrees centigrade, so
survival rates drop."
He said the man who crashed to
the pavement in Mortlake had probably lost consciousness and died within
the first hour of his flight.
Police said the body is being held for possible repatriation in case the man's identity is established.
Mortlake residents and business people speak of a similar death in recent years, but disagree about the timing and the details.
"People say the same thing
happened a few years ago a few blocks away" said Jay Sivapalan, 29, who
works at the Variety Box convenience store half a block from where the
body landed. "We are near Heathrow and when they lower the landing gear,
the body falls out."
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