Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Bird hit, fire in engine force SpiceJet landing

- Ruchir Kumar ruchirkuma­r@hindustant­imes.com

PATNA: A Delhi-bound SpiceJet aircraft carrying 191 people, including two infants, caught fire after a bird hit at around noon on Sunday, soon after takeoff from Patna, but was able to make an emergency landing back at the airport without any harm to the crew and passengers, officials said.

Residents near the airport in Phulwarish­arif said they heard a loud sound, after which they noticed smoke billowing from one of the engines of the aircraft. The Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

In a separate incident on Sunday, a Delhi-bound IndiGo flight returned to the Guwahati airport after a suspected bird hit. “A Delhi-bound IndiGo flight (6E 6394) from Guwahati returned to Guwahati airport due to a suspected bird hit after the takeoff. All passengers were accommodat­ed on another flight to Delhi. Aircraft is being inspected,” ANI reported the airline as saying in a statement late in the evening.

The fire in SpiceJet flight SG 723 was noticed when the Boeing 737 aircraft was between Khagaul and Phulwarish­arif, a short distance away from the Patna airport.

A SpiceJet statement later said: “On takeoff, during rotation, cockpit crew suspected bird hit on engine 01. As a precaution­ary measure… the captain shut down the affected engine and decided to return to Patna.”

“The aircraft landed safely in Patna and the passengers deboarded safely. Post-flight inspection showed bird hit, with three fan blades damaged,” the airline added.

The aircraft, with smoke coming out of one of its engines, was in the air for 22 minutes before it made an emergency landing at 12.25pm, as two crash fire tenders and two ambulances were lined up along the runway.

Chandrashe­khar Singh, district magistrate, Patna, said all 185 passengers were safe and the matter was being investigat­ed. There were six crew members on the flight. A DGCA official, requesting anonymity, said the cabin crew did not observe any abnormalit­y after the pilot suspected a bird-hit. “During rotation, the pilot suspected bird hit in the engine. However, the cockpit crew did not observe any abnormalit­y and hence the aircraft continued to climb further,” the official said. “The cabin crew informed the pilot about sparks from Engine 1 after which the pilot carried out fire checks and shutdown the engine as precaution­ary measure. It was then that the pilot declared PAN-PAN and decided to return to Patna.”

Bird hits are common around Patna as there is an open abattoir near the airport, which attracts birds. The issue has been raised during several environmen­t committee meetings with the state government in the past several years, airline officials said.

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 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The SpiceJet plane after an emergency landing at the Jai Prakash Narayan airport in Patna after it caught fire mid-air.
HT PHOTO The SpiceJet plane after an emergency landing at the Jai Prakash Narayan airport in Patna after it caught fire mid-air.

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