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EgyptAir recently got a brand-new passenger – for life.

Last week, an EgyptAir flight was traveling from Cairo to London when passenger Hiyam Nasr Naji Daaban, 38, went into labor.

The flight made an emergency landing in Munich, but before it landed, Daaban had already given birth to a baby girl, according to tweets from EgyptAir.

The next day, the airline announced the newborn would be given free airline tickets for life, at least to Munich.

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In a Facebook post, the airline congratulated Daaban on her newborn and made several thanks, including to Dr. Moataz Fathi “for his efforts to keep the mother and baby safe,” and to the crew and passengers for how they handled the situation.

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According to a translation of the airline’s tweets, which were originally in Arabic, the newborn was given “a free ticket for life on Munich flights.”

FILE - In this May 19, 2016 file photo, an EgyptAir Airbus A330-300 takes off for Cairo from Charles de Gaulle Airport outside of Paris. Egyptian investigators said Saturday, July 2, 2016, that they will be able to access the cockpit voice recordings of the EgyptAir flight that crashed in May despite damage to the black box. The flight from Paris to Cairo crashed into the Mediterranean on May 19, killing all 66 people on board. The pilots made no distress call, and no militant group has claimed to have brought the aircraft down. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)

A woman gave birth on an EgyptAir flight from Cairo to London last week and the airline gave her baby a lifetime of free airline tickets. (AP)

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This isn’t the first time a baby has been born in the air.

Last month, an Alaska woman gave birth to a baby boy while she was being flown to Anchorage on a medical flight.

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According to reports, the woman, Chrystal Hicks, from Glenallen, Alaska, was only 35 weeks into her pregnancy when she started having contractions on Aug. 5.

Emergency personnel arranged to fly her to an Anchorage hospital, but 20 minutes into the flight, she gave birth.

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She decided to name her son Sky Airon Hicks to commemorate his unusual birth. However, she wrote on his birth certificate that he was born in Anchorage.

“I didn’t want to put on a plane or in the sky," she told KTUU last month.

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