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Sick Taiwanese flown home on emergency direct flight
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A 28-year-old Taiwanese computer engineer, who was in critical condition after breaking down with vascular disease, was sent home from southwestern China early Monday morning on a direct chartered flight.(Xinhua Photo)
| CHENGDU, April 2 (Xinhua) -- A 28-year-old Taiwanese
computer engineer, who was in critical condition after breaking down with
vascular disease, was sent home from southwestern China early Monday morning on
a direct chartered flight.
The plane, an Airbus 320 of Taiwan TransAsia Airways,
took off from the Shuangliu airport of Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan
province, at about 3 a.m. and is expected to have arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan
International Airport around 6 a.m.
Aboard the plane, Tang Mingneng, who was diagnosed
with arterial tumour at Sichuan Huaxi Hospital, was accompanied by his family
members and four medical personnel with International SOS rescue agency.
Tang worked as an engineer for a Taiwan-based laptop
computer repair company and came to Chengdu on March 22 for technology backup.
He suddenly fell ill last Tuesday and was hospitalized Wednesday.
Doctors said Tang's condition had been stable but
predicted massive hemorrhage could happen at any time. Tang's brother visited
him last Thursday and said the family wished Tang would receive an operation in
Taiwan. He applied for an emergency chartered flight, and the plan was promptly
approved in two days.
The authorities of the two sides began allowing
cross-Strait chartered flights for medical emergencies last June. More than six
such flights had taken nearly 20 patients across the Strait so
far.
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