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Posted: 2023-03-13 08:01:52

Student Isabella Beale says Singapore Airlines discriminated against her on separate occasions for being an amputee.

Isabella, 23, was travelling with family to and from Europe in January this year when she says she was singled out for being seated in emergency exit row seats that had been booked by another family member.

During the booking process, Singapore Airlines currently lists those who are pregnant, those under 15, those with infants or those in need of "special assistance" as being unable to sit in emergency exit rows.

A young white woman with dark hair stands and smiles at the camera. Her left forearm ends at the elbow.
Isabella is a congenital amputee without a left forearm, but doesn't need assistance.(Supplied)

While Ms Beale is a congenital amputee without a left forearm, she does not require any assistance.

Ms Beale said that on her flight from Australia a staff member left her feeling humiliated in front of other passengers.

"All of a sudden an air hostess approaches me and, in quite a loud tone and quite, like frantic and rushed, she just says, 'Get out, get out of that seat now, you need to get up'," Ms Beale said.

"I'm a bit taken aback and I switch seats with my partner, which I think is going to be fine as long as I'm not directly next to the emergency door … everyone is looking at us at this point, and can overhear the conversation.

"[She] goes, 'No, get up you have to sit in the row behind'.

"I had a little cry just because it was such an affronting thing to happen … it was very humiliating and upsetting."

Peak bodies for Australians with disabilities say such incidents are common, and government and authorities can take action to improve the situation.

The federal government said disability discrimination and access to air travel would be a key focus of an upcoming aviation review.

Ms Beale said while she understands that not having someone with a disability in an exit row may be an airline's policy, that does not excuse staff treating people with disabilities poorly.

"I understand that there might be policy around this, I'm not saying I need you to sit me in emergency, I'm saying I need you to treat me like a human being," she said.

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