A senior official of the Indian Meteorological Department, who examined a small sample, said the projectile was “definitely not a meteorological phenomenon”
In December 2016, a court in India ruled that airlines in India would be fined if their planes release human waste from toilets in the air
NEW DELHI Jan 24 (TNS): The 10-12kg chunk of ice fell on Fazilpur Badli village with a big thud, startled residents.
Senior Gurgaon official Vivek Kalia told some villagers thought it was an “extra-terrestrial” object.
Plane toilets store human waste in special tanks. These are normally disposed of once the plane has landed. But international aviation authorities acknowledge that lavatory leaks can occur in the air.
Mr Kalia told that a sample of the projectile had been sent for chemical analysis, but “we suspect strongly” that it is frozen airline excrement.
“It was a very heavy icy ball of ice which dropped from the skies early on Saturday morning. There was big thud and people of the village came running out of their homes to find out what had happened,” he said.
“Some villagers thought it was an extra-terrestrial object. Others thought it was some celestial rock and I’ve heard that they took samples home,” he said.
The Times of India newspaper reported that people “sneaked a few pieces into their clothes”, stored them in refrigerators at home.
A senior official of the Indian Meteorological Department, who examined a small sample, said the projectile was “definitely not a meteorological phenomenon”.
In December 2016, a court in India ruled that airlines in India would be fined if their planes release human waste from toilets in the air.
In January 2016, a woman in central Madhya Pradesh state suffered a severe shoulder injury when she was hit by a football-sized chunk of ice which fell from the air and crashed into the roof of her house. A newspaper said that she may have been hit by frozen airline waste.