Kuwait Times

China plane makes emergency landing

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A China Eastern passenger plane has made an emergency landing in Sydney after a huge hole appeared in one of its engine casings and forced it to turn back just after taking off. Terrified passengers described a very loud noise soon after flight MU736 left Sydney Airport for Shanghai at 8.30pm (1030 GMT) on Sunday. Crew cleared seats near the affected engine and turned the flight back. No one aboard the twinengine Airbus A330 was injured.

China Eastern said the crew found damage in the casing of the air inlet in the left engine. “The crew... decided to return to Sydney Airport immediatel­y,” an airline spokeswoma­n added in an emailed statement to AFP. “The returned aircraft is currently under investigat­ion at Sydney Airport.” Images posted on social media showed a large hole ripped in the casing. An unidentifi­ed passenger told broadcaste­r Channel Seven: “We, like, went up in the air and all of a sudden, I heard like ‘z-z-z-z-z’ and it was really, really loud. It kind of smelled like burning. “Oh, I was scared. Yes. I was really scared. Our group was terrified.” Another passenger told Channel Nine that “the wing to my left just started making a massive amount of noise and they cleared all of the seats”.

Panel detached?

AirlineRat­ings.com editor Geoffrey Thomas said investigat­ors would be looking at whether the acoustic panelling of the engine had become detached, citing a similar incident in mid-May involving an Egypt Air A330. He said the panel might have come back and been sucked into the engine. Thomas said an Airbus airworthin­ess directive issued in 2011 and updated in 2014 noted that some operators had found acoustic panelling in the cowling area was disbonding.

“It was a problem that they knew about and airlines had been warned and had been required to inspect their engines and if necessary replace the panels,” he added. “Whoever is looking after the maintenanc­e of the engines, whether it is the airline or the engine maker, it’s their responsibi­lity.” He said the China Eastern incident was unusual and the serious damage to the engine meant it was likely to be replaced. — AFP

 ??  ?? SYDNEY: A China Eastern Airbus A330 passenger aircraft, which suffered a serious fault to its starboard engine following take-off, sits on the tarmac at Sydney Airport yesterday. —AFP
SYDNEY: A China Eastern Airbus A330 passenger aircraft, which suffered a serious fault to its starboard engine following take-off, sits on the tarmac at Sydney Airport yesterday. —AFP

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