Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Vande Bharat flight skids off runway

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In all there were 174 adult passengers on board, 10 infants, two pilots, and four crew members. Flight records reviewed by HT showed that several of the passengers cited job loss as the reason for returning to the country.

“It was raining heavily. The pilot had given a warning before landing saying the weather was really bad. He tried for safe landing twice but lost control. The aircraft shot off the runway and skidded off and it broke into two pieces. It was a miraculous escape for many,” said V Ibrahim, among the passengers who survived with minor injuries.

Among the 19 casualties were four children, officials said.

“We are in touch with local authoritie­s... Relief teams from Air India and AAI are being immediatel­y dispatched from Delhi and Mumbai. All efforts being made to help passengers. A formal enquiry will be conducted by Aircraft Accident Investigat­ion Board (AAIB),” civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.

“I have asked minister for local self government AC Moideen to rush to the airport and coordinate rescue efforts. It is another shocking incident,” said chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan on a day when the state was also hit by a landslide that killed 15 people.

The fatalities include the flight’s commander Deepak V

Sathe, a former Air Force Pilot, and co-pilot Akhilesh Kumar. Rescue personnel were on the scene and more than 150 people were taken to the hospital.

“We regret that there has been an incident regarding our aircraft,” Air India Express said in a statement. Help centers were being set up in Sharjah and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

According to a playback on flight-tracking website Flightrada­r24, the plane circled the airport twice before attempting to land. In its second instance, it aborted the attempt with 2,000 feet to go before the crash landing.

The so-called tabletop airport has limited space at the ends of the runway, and several internatio­nal airlines had stopped flying bigger aircraft into Kozhikode due to safety issues over the length of the runway.

“Both Mangalore and Calicut airport do not have the required space on either side of the runway for safe landing. The Calicut runway does not have mandatory 155m side strip and there is a 70m drop at either end. We at the Civil Aviation Safety Advisory Council had warned the authoritie­s ten years back that the runway is very risky for landing during rains,” said aviation safety consultant Mohan Ranganatha­n, a former instructor pilot of Boeing 737 who specialise­d in wet runway operations training.

“The visibility was 2,000 metres (which is not considered to be bad) along with heavy rains. Calicut is a table top airport like Mangalore but at a lower height. The gorge at the end is not very deep and has a road going through it. Landing an aircraft is all about managing the energy of aircraft. The atmospheri­cs play a major part,” said a senior air traffic controller in Mumbai, asking not to be named.

“Head winds and good runway friction conditions help a pilot in managing the energy so that the aircraft is brought to a stop from landing speeds of 250 km per hour. When atmospheri­cs are not in favour then a mishap can happen, as it has in this case. But it means the pilot would sight the runway only about a minute before landing so it’s quite challengin­g as well,” this person added.

President Ram Nath Kovind, Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union home minister Amit Shah, Congress MP Rahul Gandhi, Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal and several other leaders offered their condolence­s over the incident.

We are in touch with local authoritie­s... Relief teams from Air India and AAI are being immediatel­y dispatched from Delhi and Mumbai. All efforts being made to help passengers. A formal enquiry will be conducted

HS PURI , civil aviation minister

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