According to officials, a Southwest Airlines flight bound for Florida was forced to return to Cuba on Sunday due to a bird strike reportedly causing an engine to catch fire, filling the cabin with smoke.
The air carrier confirmed in a statement that 147 passengers and six crew members were safely evacuated from the plane via slides.
Southwest flight #2923 departed from Havana’s José Martí International Airport and was en route to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport when it “experienced bird strikes to an engine and the aircraft’s nose,” the company said.
After the evacuation, the airline said the airport bused passengers and crew members to the terminal and transferred them to a different flight to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.
“To be honest, I thought it was my time to go,” Steven Rodriguez told the network. “I was terrified.”
Rodriguez also said crew members aboard the commercial flight did not immediately drop overhead oxygen masks, prompting passengers to try to access them manually.
“People started taking matters into their own hands and by force were punching the roof to eject the masks,” he said. “And people had bloody knuckles and all because they were punching the roof. There were little kids on the plane and elderly women.”
“We apologized to our Customers for the negative experience, extending compensation for the inconvenience and offering additional support,” the spokesperson said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.