The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Stricken Turkey plane ‘suffered sudden engine surge’

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ISTANBUL: A Turkish passenger plane that plunged off a runway onto a cliff precarious­ly close to the sea suddenly turned after a surge of power in one of its engines, pilots told investigat­ors in comments published.

The Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737-800 plane had landed normally at Trabzon airport on a flight from Ankara but then went off the runway just metres from the waters of the Black Sea with its wheels stuck in mud.

All 162 passenger and six crew were safely evacuated but the plane remains stricken on the side of the muddy embankment, with the aircraft now secured with a cable to prevent it from slipping into the sea.

The pilot, co-pilot and crew have now made statements to Trabzon prosecutor­s and both pilots passed breathalys­er tests, the Dogan news agency said.

“When we were going to make our usual manoeuvre towards the right from the seaside by reducing our speed, the right engine suddenly gained speed for a reason we do not know,” the pilot was quoted as telling the prosecutor­s.

“Due to this speed, the plane got out of our control and suddenly swung to the left and got stuck into the mud in the cliff.”

It is still not clear what caused the sudden surge in power from the right engine. Images published by Dogan showed that one of the engines had fallen into the water.

The pilot said that passengers were ordered to leave the plane by the back door without taking personal belongings, followed by the crew and finally the pilots themselves. — AFP

 ??  ?? A Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 passenger plane is seen struck in mud on an embankment, a day after skidding off the airstrip, after landing at Trabzon’s airport on the Black Sea coast. — AFP photo
A Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 passenger plane is seen struck in mud on an embankment, a day after skidding off the airstrip, after landing at Trabzon’s airport on the Black Sea coast. — AFP photo

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