Disabled British woman stranded in Singapore resumes holiday after wheelchair found

Gemma Quinn, 35, booked a two-week trip around Asia. (PA)
Gemma Quinn, 35, booked a two-week trip around Asia. (PA)

A disabled woman was left stranded in Singapore after an airline lost part of her wheelchair will be able to continue her dream trip after it was recovered.

Gemma Quinn, 35, booked a £15,000 19-day trip around Asia with her two carers but was left distraught when part of her chair was lost in transit.

Ms Quinn, was paralysed from the neck down in a car accident in 1992, was faced with the possibility of not being able to leave her hotel room following the loss of her custom-made wheelchair.

On her first flight with Emirates on December 23, the back of the chair was lost after it was put in the hold, rendering Ms Quinn’s vital chair unusable.

An Emirates Airbus A380 plane comes into land at Heathrow Airport from Dubai. Airbus has announced it will cease deliveries of its flagship A380 superjumbo passenger jet in 2021.
Part of Ms Quinn's chair went missing on an Emirates flight. (Getty) [file photo]

The experienced traveller flew from Manchester Airport to Dubai, where she was carried through the airport on a stretcher and told a solution would be found for when she arrived in Singapore.

However, when she arrived in Singapore on December 24, the back had not been found, leaving Ms Quinn unable to leave her bed or consider completing the next two stops on her trip.

“This was meant to be a holiday of a lifetime, which has now turned into a living nightmare,” she said.

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“I have always tried to live as normal and active a life as possible. Travel always comes with its difficulties, but I have never been made to feel so disabled as I do now.”

Ms Quinn said she felt “degraded” by the experience with Emirates when she was informed the back of her chair had been lost after her first flight, adding that the specially-moulded back of the chair was not registered as lost by Emirates until she got to Singapore.

“It was an absolutely mortifying experience,” Ms Quinn said. “I got the feeling that they just wanted me off the aircraft.”

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On Wednesday, Emirates confirmed the missing part of Ms Quinn’s chair had been found, and apologised.

A spokesman said: “Emirates wishes to confirm that the missing part of Ms Quinn’s wheelchair has been located in Dubai and is being transported to Singapore on 25 December 2019.

“The part will be handed over to her upon its arrival. Our teams in Dubai and Singapore have made every effort to help Ms Quinn and her family continue on their planned holiday, and we are very sorry for the inconvenience they have experienced.”

Ms Quinn said she would wait until the part had been returned to her before celebrating.

She said: “I have spoken to an Emirates representative who assured me it’s on its way to me in a flight coming in tonight but I will believe it when I see it.

“I foolishly believed it was on its way when my friend sent me her response from Emirates informing her it was on its way this morning. I was crushed when it didn’t arrive.”