Vancouver Sun

Plane makes crashlandi­ngin Pacific lagoon

U.S. sailors join locals in rescue in Micronesia

- Nick Perry

WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND• A passenger on a plane that crashed into a Pacific lagoon on Friday said the flight attendants were panicking and he saw water pouring through a hole in the side of the plane before he was able to escape.

Local boats helped rescue all 47 passengers and crew after the plane hit the water while trying to land at the Chuuk Island airport in the Micronesia archipelag­o.

Seven people were taken to a hospital, according to officials, including one described as being in critical but stable condition.

Passenger Bill Jaynes said the Air Niugini plane came in very low.

“I thought we landed hard,” he said. “Until I looked over and saw a hole in the side of the plane and water was coming in. And I thought, well, this is not the way it’s supposed to happen.”

Jaynes said those aboard managed to wade through waist-deep water to the emergency exits on the sinking plane.

He said the flight attendants were yelling, and that he suffered a minor head injury. He said he called his wife, who started crying.

“I was really impressed with the locals who immediatel­y started coming out in boats,” he said in an interview with a missionary in Chuuk, Matthew Colson, that was posted online. “One would think that they might be afraid to approach a plane that’s just crashed.”

The sequence of events remains unclear. The airline said the plane landed short of the runway. However, Jaynes said the only scenario he can imagine is that it hit the end of the runway and continued into the water.

The U.S. Navy said sailors working nearby on improving a wharf also helped in the rescue by using an inflatable boat to shuttle people ashore before the plane sank in about 30 metres of water.

Louie Mallari, who was working at a hotel near the airport, said he could hear the whole thing happen.

“As the plane approaches, the sound of the engine is getting stronger, then suddenly a splash of water,” he said, adding that he then heard screaming.

He said it’s a good thing that so many people use boats to travel and were able to quickly help with the rescue.

“It’s really fortunate that we didn’t have any fatalities,” said Glenn Harris, a government aviation security inspector for the Federated States of Micronesia.

Harris said the plane left from the Micronesia­n island of Pohnpei about 700 kilometres to the east before ending up in the water at about 10 a.m.

He said he has yet to see a passenger manifest, but typical passengers would include businesspe­ople from Micronesia, Papua New Guinea and Australia, as well as tourists. Chuuk is known for its diving, with dozens of Second World War shipwrecks in the clear waters.

Harris said he doesn’t know what caused the crash landing or whether the pilots had alerted air traffic control of any problems. He said an investigat­ive team would be on the ground in Chuuk by Saturday to figure out what went wrong.

The airline said the 35 passengers and 12 crew members aboard the Boeing 737 were all able to safely evacuate. It said the weather was poor at the time, with heavy rain and reduced visibility.

 ?? T. ZACH NIEZGODSKI/U.S. NAVY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Passengers and crew of an Air Niugini flight get shuttled to shore after the plane crashed into a lagoon on its approach to Chuuk Internatio­nal Airport in Micronesia on Friday. All passengers and crew survived the incident, which happened during heavy rains.
T. ZACH NIEZGODSKI/U.S. NAVY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Passengers and crew of an Air Niugini flight get shuttled to shore after the plane crashed into a lagoon on its approach to Chuuk Internatio­nal Airport in Micronesia on Friday. All passengers and crew survived the incident, which happened during heavy rains.

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