Weekend Herald

Singapore to Air NZ crew: Stay on plane

- Grant Bradley

Air New Zealand pilots were stuck on a damaged aircraft in Hong Kong for hours after being forced to divert to the territory.

Authoritie­s refused to let the crew go into Hong Kong — which has extremely strict entry protocols — after the Boeing 787 freight flight diverted from Guangzhou on the Chinese mainland due to a cracked windscreen.

The aircraft had taken off from Christchur­ch on Wednesday.

While the air crew are now back home, New Zealand Air Line Pilots Associatio­n president Andrew Ridling described the situation as challengin­g.

“The unexpected arrival of an aircraft and its crew into Hong Kong presented some serious challenges with how the crew were subsequent­ly handled. The Hong Kong authoritie­s refused to process the crew, which left them in a position of having to remain on the aircraft until a suitable extraction opportunit­y was presented.”

Once the initial concerns were resolved, the associatio­n’s focus turned to the crew’s welfare.

“We anticipate meeting with Air New Zealand to review the learnings in light of their risk mitigation­s,” Ridling said.

Air New Zealand chief operationa­l integrity and safety officer David Morgan said the crew remained on the aircraft as they did not meet the entry requiremen­ts for Hong Kong.

“While a cracked windscreen sounds extraordin­ary, there are four layers to an aircraft windscreen so there was no risk to the aircraft or anyone on board.”

The plane was carrying more than 24 tonnes of cargo to Guangzhou, most of it perishable goods such as fresh cherries, stone fruit and seafood for the Chinese New Year festivitie­s.

Morgan said recovering this service was important to prevent significan­t cost to Kiwi export customers.

“On the ground in Hong Kong, the team were fortunatel­y able to secure chiller space for the fresh produce while we worked on a solution.

“After exploring trucking options as well as options with our alliance and interline partners, the team secured space with a partner airline to make sure the cargo got to where it needed to be.”

He said the aircraft was awaiting a replacemen­t windscreen from Boeing in Singapore and would return to New Zealand once that was completed.

Hong Kong has very strict Covid protocols and air crew face long periods in an isolation facility if they have been exposed to the disease.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? A cracked windscreen forced a China-bound flight to divert.
Photo / NZME A cracked windscreen forced a China-bound flight to divert.

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