Stabroek News Sunday

CJIA operations back to normal, GCAA...

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After spending an estimated 43 minutes in the air on the way to Toronto, the plane made an emergency landing at approximat­ely 2:53 a.m., which was followed by an immediate evacuation of crew and passengers.

Minister of Public Infrastruc­ture David Patterson, during a press conference at the CJIA on Friday, had explained that the Fly Jamaica aircraft would have ended up in an almost exact position as the Caribbean Airlines plane that had overshot the runway at Timehri and crash-landed in 2011. He noted, however, that though that section of the runway was not opened to airport traffic, the existing extension saved the plane from suffering the same fate as the CAL aircraft, which broke in half.

It was disclosed during the press conference that on board the aircraft were 120 passengers, including nationals from Guyana, Jamaica, Trinidad, the US, Canada and Pakistan.

Chief Medical Officer at the Ministry of Public Health, Dr. Shamdeo Persaud, explained that several persons suffered minor injuries while using the evacuation slide and had to be taken to the Diamond Diagnostic Centre, where they were treated and either discharged or transferre­d to the Georgetown Public Hospital for additional tests.

Meanwhile, Fly Jamaica Airways Chairman, Captain Ronald Reece, following the accident, issued a statement saying, “We can confirm that Air Jamaica flight OJ256 bound for Toronto has returned to Georgetown with a technical problem and has suffered an accident on landing. At this time, we believe that all 118 passengers and 8 crew members are safe. We are providing local assistance and will release further informatio­n as soon as it is available.”

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