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Russia: Budget airline bans 'costly' chewing gum
- Author, News from Elsewhere...
- Role, ...as found by 91热爆 Monitoring
A low-cost Russian airline has banned passengers from chewing gum on board because it is spending so much scraping it off planes' interiors, it's reported.
The new rules will affect passengers travelling with the budget carrier Pobeda, which operates 17 routes within Russia, . The airline's CEO, Andrei Kalmykov, has previously said it costs up to 100,000 roubles ($1,700; 拢1,100) to remove each piece of gum left behind by passengers, and to restore the equipment. "We have imposed a ban on chewing gum since the middle of June due to losses sustained by the airline," Pobeda spokeswoman Yelena Selivanova.
Some Twitter users aren't that impressed with the no-gum rule. "Call a sky marshal, there is chewing gum on board," . Another user of being at school, and one man wonders how it will be enforced, : "Passenger, open you mouth, show what is inside your pockets."
But it isn't only sticky deposits causing problems for the airline. Passengers have also been making off with thousands of dollars worth of equipment from the planes, Mr Kalmykov . Among the items allegedly pinched are life jackets and safety instruction cards, he said.
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