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Two 10-year-old Black twin girls were denied boarding by a flight attendant — until they called their father, a famous CEO, and demanded the entire flight be canceled…

At Heathrow Airport on a gray Saturday morning, twin sisters Naomi and Laila Carter, both ten, stood in line at Gate B12 clutching matching backpacks and bright hopes. They were flying alone for the first time, heading to spend the summer with their grandmother in Toronto. Their father, Victor Carter, had kissed them goodbye after security and told them to call before the plane took off.

Everything felt like an adventure—until it didn’t.

As passengers began boarding, a uniformed attendant with a neat bun and clipped tone stopped the twins. Her badge read E. Walker.

“You can’t board dressed like that,” she said, her voice sharp enough to cut through the hum of the crowd.

Naomi blinked. “Like what, ma’am?”

Walker gestured toward their clothes: black leggings and oversized yellow sweatshirts. “That’s not acceptable travel attire for this airline.”

The girls exchanged a puzzled look. They’d flown before—in the same outfits. “We’re just wearing what we always wear,” Laila said quietly.

“Step aside,” the attendant replied. “You’ll need to change before boarding.”

The gate area went quiet. A few passengers watched, whispering. Naomi’s eyes filled with tears, but Laila reached for her phone with shaking hands and dialed their father.

“Dad,” she said when he answered. “She says we can’t get on the plane.”

Victor Carter wasn’t just any parent. He was the CEO of Nexus Dynamics, one of Europe’s leading software firms—and a key partner to the very airline his daughters were flying with. He didn’t shout. He didn’t curse. He simply asked his daughters to hand the phone to the gate agent.

Within minutes, his calm voice echoed through the speaker. “This is Victor Carter. Can you explain why my daughters, who are full-paying passengers, are being denied boarding for wearing leggings?”

The attendant hesitated. “Sir, they’re traveling under a special fare, which has a stricter dress policy.”

“No,” Victor said evenly. “They are not on employee passes. They are minors with purchased tickets. I expect them to be treated as customers, not problems.”

By now, other travelers had begun recording. A woman muttered, “They’re kids, for heaven’s sake.” Another man called out, “Let them on the plane!”

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