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Baby born over US airspace raises questions about nationality

Caribbean Airlines, reported that a female passenger went into labor during the journey.

NEW YORK: A routine flight from Kingston, Jamaica, to John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on April 4 witnessed an extraordinary event a baby was born mid-air.

The flight, operated by Caribbean Airlines, reported that a female passenger went into labor during the journey. The airline stated that the delivery was successful, and both mother and child were healthy upon landing.

Upon arrival in New York, the mother and newborn underwent medical checks and received necessary care. While the airline did not disclose the baby’s gender or the exact moment of birth during the four-hour flight, conversations between the pilot and an air traffic controller suggest the child may be a boy, reportedly named Kennedy by the mother.

The mid-air birth has raised interesting questions about the baby’s nationality. US citizenship laws generally grant citizenship to children born on US soil or in US airspace, but the details depend on the parents’ nationality and the plane’s exact location at the time of birth. If either parent is a US citizen, the child automatically qualifies for US citizenship.

American authorities require documentation for such births, including the pilot’s log, medical records from the flight, and confirmation of the aircraft’s position at the time of delivery.

It is worth noting that travel restrictions exist for late-stage pregnancies: typically, airlines do not allow women past 36 weeks of gestation to fly, while those over 28 weeks require a medical certificate.

Caribbean Airlines stated no in-flight emergency protocols were triggered, and the mother requested privacy.

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