Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Muslim Woman Files Complaint Against Southwest Airlines After Being Barred From Exit Row Over Hijab

Muslim Woman Files Complaint Against Southwest Airlines After Being Barred From Exit Row Over Hijab
Rick Gershon/Getty Images; WFAA/YouTube

A Muslim woman wearing a Hijab alleged a Southwest Airlines flight attendant discriminated against her. The airline employee allegedly stated she couldn't sit in the emergency exit row because she didn't speak English.

But the woman's sister and traveling companion, who was not in a Hijab, was allowed to sit there. The women had both been speaking Arabic as they boarded.


According to WFAA, Fatima Altakrouri was boarding a Southwest Airlines flight with her sister, Muna Kowni. They saw two empty seats together in the emergency exit row.

A flight attendant approached them and said Altakrouri couldn't sit there because:

"[She] couldn't speak English and would bring the whole plane down in an emergency"

Kowni said twice to the flight attendant her sister could speak English and Altakrouri also replied to the woman in English.

You can see ABC8 news coverage here:

youtu.be

Kowni said:

"And [the flight attendant] said, 'Well, you can sit [in the exit row] but she can't'."
"So, that's when I had to go back and didn't want to be far from where my sister is."
"We were really patient, sitting for three hours being quiet, not saying anything after we got insulted."

Altakrouri said in a press conference:

"That's what makes it even more appalling."
"The fact that I am actually corresponding with her in the language that she is [addressing] me with, and she continues to say that I do not speak English, is very upsetting in my opinion."

The sisters went back to their original separate seating assignments.

They asked to speak to the flight attendant and a supervisor upon landing, but were not afforded the courtesy.

Kowni explained:

"And once we arrived, we're like, 'Ya know what, let's go to her, talk to her, maybe she'll say sorry, maybe something like that'."
"But she was like, 'Get off the plane'."

The flight attendant made an already stressful situation worse. The sisters—both born and raised in the United States— were flying to Dallas, Texas to see their mother who was in the ICU.

In the above video shared by USA TODAY, Altakrouri said she didn't feel like an American after the religious and xenophobic targeting even though she was born in the USA.


Southwest spokesperson Brandy King told a different version of the incident.

"Our internal reports from the flight do not support claims made by the passenger regarding comments or decisions being made based upon appearance."
"The safety of our passengers is paramount, and individuals seated in an exit row are required to verbally indicate that they can perform certain duties in flight."
"Our Crew is responsible for getting that confirmation from a passenger before seating them in an overwing exit row and was unable to gain acknowledgment from the passenger during boarding. Therefore, as a courtesy, the Crew offered her an alternate seat."


People were outraged by the incident.









Unfortunately, no other passengers did say anything when it happened.

Altakrouri and Kowni expressed their sadness and frustration over the incident.

Executive director of CAIR-Texas DFW, Faizan Syed, said in a statement:

"This is textbook religious discrimination and profiling."
"You have two sisters, one who wears the hijab and the other who does not, and both board at the same time."
"One is denied the right to sit where she wants, while the other is encouraged to take a seat based on nothing else then perceived religiosity."

WFAA reports Altakrouri filed her complaint with the U.S. Department of Transportation.

More from Trending

Donald Trump; a street in Stockholm, Sweden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Pradeep Dambarage/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Stockholm Floored After Trump Administration Sends Letter Demanding They End DEI Programs

Swedish authorities in the capital of Stockholm criticized the Trump administration for sending a "bizarre" letter ordering that the city end its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.

The letter marked the latest step in President Donald Trump’s broader push to dismantle federal programs focused on diversity and inclusion—part of what he pledged in his inaugural address would be a campaign to stop attempts to “socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life.”

Keep Reading Show less
person using laptop computer and green stethoscope nearby
National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Doctors Divulge The Medical Questions They Wish Their Friends Hadn't Asked Them

Some professions seem to inspire people to ask for advice or insight. Medicine is high—if not at the top—on that list.

Once people find out a person is a medical professional, they often ask for an impromptu diagnosis or treatment recommendations.

Keep Reading Show less
Chris Pratt
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Chris Pratt Sparks Heated Debate Once Again With His Mother's Day Tribute On Instagram

In what has become a Mother's Day tradition, actor Chris Pratt thanked his wife Katherine Schwarzenegger for being mother to his four children. But the mother of his eldest child—son Jack, age 12—was noticeably absent from his annual Instagram post.

Again.

Keep Reading Show less
Roger Stone; Mark Kelly
Joe Raedle/Getty Images; Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty Images

Roger Stone Slammed After Suggesting Dem Senator Should Be 'Executed' For Criticizing Trump

President Donald Trump's ally is facing heavy criticism after declaring that Arizona Democratic Senator Mark Kelly should be charged with "treason" and "executed" for his dealings with a Chinese company that makes surveillance balloons.

Stone's remarks followed Kelly's comments on Trump's crypto coin scheme outlined in a now-rejected bill that aimed to establish a regulatory framework for stablecoins, a type of digital asset designed to maintain a fixed $1 value, making it better suited for everyday transactions. Democrats said the legislation did not contain adequate standards to safeguard against corruption.

Keep Reading Show less
Famous animal conservationist and zookeeper Robert Irwin
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Robert Irwin's Underwear Shoot Jokes

Animal rights activist and conservationist Robert Irwin discovered that the flirty DMs from fans of his sexy underwear campaign are “a dangerous place” to explore.

The son of the late Steve Irwin is all grown up, and the 21-year-old zookeeper recently modeled semi-nude for an Australian underwear company called Bonds, while wearing venomous snakes, lizards, spiders, alligators, comfy undies… and nothing else. Crikey!

Keep Reading Show less