
A routine winter-sun charter from Cape Verde to Prague ended in tragedy late Tuesday when a female passenger collapsed and died minutes after the Boeing 737 had parked on a remote stand at Václav Havel Airport. The Smartwings crew issued a medical emergency call at 21:55 CET, but airport paramedics were unable to revive the victim, whom Czech Foreigners’ Police said appeared to have suffered natural causes(praguemorning.cz).
While fatalities in flight are rare—industry data suggest roughly one death per million passengers—the incident has reignited debate over on-board medical preparedness on European charter carriers. Under EU-OPS 1.745, airlines must carry first-aid kits and train cabin staff in CPR, but advanced equipment such as automated external defibrillators (AEDs) is not mandatory for short- to medium-haul aircraft. Several Czech travel-risk consultants told Global Mobility News that corporate travel policies should verify whether preferred carriers exceed minimum regulatory standards, particularly on long-sector holiday routes popular with assignees’ families.
Immigration formalities for the remaining 183 passengers were completed air-side after a 90-minute delay while police collected witness statements. Mobility managers were advised that no passports were stamped with an arrival time later than the scheduled block-in, preserving Schengen-stay calculations. However, connecting travelers missed onward trains, illustrating the cascading impact a single onboard emergency can have on complex itineraries.
For travellers and mobility managers who want to keep the administrative side of trips just as well controlled as the health and safety aspects, VisaHQ provides an all-in-one platform to secure Czech visas, monitor Schengen-stay limits and process last-minute travel documents online. The service’s Czech Republic portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) offers up-to-date entry requirements and expedited processing options, helping companies and individual passengers stay compliant even when flight disruptions throw schedules off course.
Smartwings said it has launched an internal investigation and is cooperating fully with the Czech Civil Aviation Authority; the airline’s in-flight medical kit and logbook have been sealed for inspection. The Foreigners’ Police have ruled out foul play, and an autopsy was being performed at the Institute of Forensic Medicine. Results are expected within 10 days, after which Czech authorities will liaise with Cape Verdean diplomats to repatriate the body.
The case is a sombre reminder that duty-of-care extends beyond visas and work permits. Companies are encouraged to brief employees on how to summon medical assistance at altitude, ensure their travel-insurance policies cover in-flight incidents, and maintain updated emergency contacts within assignment-management systems.
While fatalities in flight are rare—industry data suggest roughly one death per million passengers—the incident has reignited debate over on-board medical preparedness on European charter carriers. Under EU-OPS 1.745, airlines must carry first-aid kits and train cabin staff in CPR, but advanced equipment such as automated external defibrillators (AEDs) is not mandatory for short- to medium-haul aircraft. Several Czech travel-risk consultants told Global Mobility News that corporate travel policies should verify whether preferred carriers exceed minimum regulatory standards, particularly on long-sector holiday routes popular with assignees’ families.
Immigration formalities for the remaining 183 passengers were completed air-side after a 90-minute delay while police collected witness statements. Mobility managers were advised that no passports were stamped with an arrival time later than the scheduled block-in, preserving Schengen-stay calculations. However, connecting travelers missed onward trains, illustrating the cascading impact a single onboard emergency can have on complex itineraries.
For travellers and mobility managers who want to keep the administrative side of trips just as well controlled as the health and safety aspects, VisaHQ provides an all-in-one platform to secure Czech visas, monitor Schengen-stay limits and process last-minute travel documents online. The service’s Czech Republic portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) offers up-to-date entry requirements and expedited processing options, helping companies and individual passengers stay compliant even when flight disruptions throw schedules off course.
Smartwings said it has launched an internal investigation and is cooperating fully with the Czech Civil Aviation Authority; the airline’s in-flight medical kit and logbook have been sealed for inspection. The Foreigners’ Police have ruled out foul play, and an autopsy was being performed at the Institute of Forensic Medicine. Results are expected within 10 days, after which Czech authorities will liaise with Cape Verdean diplomats to repatriate the body.
The case is a sombre reminder that duty-of-care extends beyond visas and work permits. Companies are encouraged to brief employees on how to summon medical assistance at altitude, ensure their travel-insurance policies cover in-flight incidents, and maintain updated emergency contacts within assignment-management systems.











