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It was a quiet Sunday morning at Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport. Planes were landing, passengers were stepping off, and the routine buzz of the airport filled the air.But then something unusual caught the eye of the ground staff.Walking barefoot on the taxiway, dazed and exhausted, was a young boy in a simple kurta-pajama.

His tiny feet were blistered, his clothes covered in dust, and in his pocket only a few medicines.Alarm bells rang immediately.

Security rushed in. Who was this boy? How did he even get onto the runway of one of the busiest airports in the world?The boy’s name was Faizal, just 13 years old. And the truth behind his arrival shocked everyone. Faizal hadn’t walked into Delhi airport. He had flown there… hidden inside the wheel-well of a Kam Air flight from Kabul.Yes – the wheel-well – that tiny space inside the aircraft’s landing gear, where temperatures can fall to life-threatening levels and oxygen becomes dangerously scarce. A place where so many before him had lost their lives.

The flight had landed at 10:20 am. For 90 minutes, while the jet soared 30,000 feet above the ground, Faizal had clung to life in that freezing metal compartment.When security officers brought in Afghan crew members to help translate – since Faizal could not speak English or Hindi – his story unfolded like something out of a survival tale.He was from Kunduz, Afghanistan, and desperate to escape. He had sneaked into Kabul airport, blending in with passengers, and once near the aircraft, crawled into the landing gear compartment, curling himself into a ball.Faizal described how, during takeoff, the tyres grew so hot that his shoes actually melted against them.

Later, as the plane climbed into the sky, the heat from the tyres was the only thing that kept him from freezing. Wrapped tightly in his jacket, he somehow managed to endure the unbearable cold.When airport staff later inspected the landing gear, they even found a small red Bluetooth speaker – the only other thing he had carried with him.For three long hours, officials from immigration, security agencies, and the ministries of home and external affairs worked together. Afghan authorities were contacted, his identity verified, and by afternoon, arrangements were made for his return.At 4 pm, Faizal boarded the very same Kam Air jet again – but this time, in a passenger seat. No more hiding, no more risking his life in the shadows of the plane.Aviation experts later said that his survival was nothing short of a miracle. While there is some space around the landing gear, it is not pressurized, and temperatures drop sharply at high altitudes.And the truth is – most people don’t survive such journeys. Around the world, there are chilling stories of wheel-well stowaways. In January 2024, two men were found dead inside the landing gear of a JetBlue flight from the Dominican Republic to Florida. In 2023, an Algerian youth barely survived a flight to Paris, suffering from severe hypothermia.

Faizal’s story is one of the rare exceptions – a fragile, miraculous survival against impossible odds.A barefoot boy… chasing hope… carried across the skies in the most dangerous way imaginable.And though he was sent back the very same day, his journey leaves behind a haunting question – what desperation, what dreams, can push a 13-year-old child to risk everything… even his life… for just a chance at a better tomorrow?