Singapore Airlines turbulence: carrier may face hefty payout pressure after SQ321 flight
- Singapore Airlines is liable for up to US$170,000 per person, under a convention, which governs aviation rights and compensation to passengers after an accident
- However, there can be scope for larger damages. As of Friday, 48 people remain in three hospitals across Bangkok

Passengers with spinal and brain injuries could seek eight-figure payouts, one lawyer said, as the extent of the harm following the Singapore Airlines flight that encountered extreme turbulence becomes clearer.
Prior payouts for similarly severe injuries escalated “easily into seven and sometimes eight-figure claims,” Peter Neenan, a partner specialising in aviation litigation at London-based firm Stewarts, said in an interview.
Several dozen people suffered traumatic, and potentially life-changing, injuries, doctors revealed Thursday. Some patients encountered paralysis, and 22 patients are being treated for spinal and spinal cord injuries. Another six are being treated for skull and brain trauma. A 73-year-old Briton died of a suspected heart attack.
The 229 crew and passengers on board Flight SQ321 were violently shaken by sudden and extreme turbulence over Myanmar as the Boeing 777 aircraft was en route from London to Singapore, forcing the jet to make an emergency landing in Bangkok on Tuesday afternoon.
Under the Montreal Convention, which governs aviation rights and compensation for international flights from death and injury to passengers after an accident, Singapore Airlines is liable for up to US$170,000 per person.
However, there can be scope for larger damages.