The Gold Coast Bulletin

Dozen Aussies escape Japanese plane crash

Jet passengers safe after crash with smaller aircraft that killed five

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Twelve Australian­s were on board the Japan Airlines passenger jet that collided with a Japan Coast Guard plane at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport, according to Emergency Management Minister Murray Watt.

“I know this time of year, Japan is a pretty popular tourist destinatio­n for Australian­s. My understand­ing is that with the plane crash, there were about 12 Australian passengers on those planes, but none have been injured,” Mr Watt told Sky News.

All 379 passengers and crew on board the passenger plane which burst into flames were safely evacuated, Japanese transport minister Tetsuo Saito told reporters.

But five of the six crew members from the smaller plane – bound for central Japan after Monday’s huge earthquake – died, he said.

The captain escaped and survived but was injured, he said, cautioning that “we’re not at the stage to explain the cause” of the accident.

Television and unverified footage shared on social media showed the Japan Airlines (JAL) airliner moving along the runway before a large eruption of orange flames and black smoke burst from beneath and behind it.

Video posted to social media platform X showed people sliding down an inflatable emergency slide from the side of the passenger plane while flames shot out from the rear of the aircraft.

All 367 passengers plus 12 crew on-board were swiftly taken off the plane before dozens of fire engines with flashing blue lights sprayed the fuselage.

They however failed to put out the flames coming out of windows near the wings and the blaze soon engulfed the entire aircraft.

The plane, reportedly an Airbus 350, had arrived from New Chitose Airport serving Sapporo on the northern island of Hokkaido. Those on board included eight children.

“Smoke began to fill the plane, and I thought, ‘this could be really bad’”, an adult male passenger told reporters.

“An announceme­nt said doors in the back and middle could not be opened. So everyone disembarke­d from the front,” he said.

A female passenger said it had been dark on-board as the fire intensifie­d after landing.

“It was getting hot inside the plane, and I thought, to be honest, I would not survive,” she said in comments shown on broadcaste­r NHK.

The coast guard plane had been preparing to fly to Ishikawa prefecture to deliver supplies after the devastatin­g New Year’s Day earthquake which killed at least 48 people.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida praised the deceased crew members on their way to help the victims of the quake.

“These were employees who had a high sense of mission and responsibi­lity for the affected areas. It’s very regrettabl­e,” he told reporters at the airport.

“I express my respect and gratitude to their sense of mission,” he said.

Haneda suspended domestic flights in the wake of the fire on the runway, according to its website, but most internatio­nal takeoffs and landings were still operating.

There was also burning debris on the runway at Haneda, one of the world’s busiest airports.

A transport ministry official said investigat­ions into the incident were ongoing, including exchanges between the flights and air traffic control.

Japan has not suffered a serious commercial aviation accident in decades.

Its worst ever accident was in 1985, when a JAL jumbo jet flying from Tokyo to Osaka crashed in central Gunma region, killing 520 passengers and crew.

That disaster was one of the world’s deadliest plane crashes involving a single flight.

 ?? Picture: JIJI PRESS / AFP ?? The Japan Airlines plane on fire on a runway of Tokyo's Haneda Airport.
Picture: JIJI PRESS / AFP The Japan Airlines plane on fire on a runway of Tokyo's Haneda Airport.

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