The Ryanair flight was Milan-bound
Nine people have been injured after a Ryanair plane was forced to make an emergency landing.
The flight was forced to land in the southern German city of Memmingen, 113km from Munich, following heavy turbulence during a thunderstorm last night.
The plane was operating a route from Berlin to Milan with 185 people on board.
Police in Bavaria said in a statement that the inclement weather conditions forced the pilot to initiate the procedure for an emergency landing.
Ryanair said in a statement on Thursday that the flight’s captain had requested medical assistance ahead of landing
Nine people between the ages of two and 59 were injured by the turbulence with the plane landing safely in Germany.
One woman received a heady injury while her two-year old toddler suffered bruises.
Another woman had back pain, with all three taken to hospital.
Emergency services were immediately deployed on site at the airport.
The other injuries were treated on site.
According to the Mirror, one passenger described the scenes as “chaotic and dangerous”.
The paper also said that experts claim the plane encountered a “supercell” a dangerous rotating thunderstorm.
Supercells house tornado like winds inside them, making for dangerous weather conditions.
Not far from the area in Ulm, a tornado tore off roofs from houses.
Ryanair organised a bus transfer to Milan for the passengers since local aviation authorities did not clear an onwards flight, police said.
The aircraft in question will have been a variant of the 737 family seeing as the airline operates this type only, (excluding subsidiary Lauda).