San Francisco Chronicle

Fliers rattled after plane slides off rainy runway

- By Jim Gomez Jim Gomez is an Associated Press writer.

MANILA — Passengers of a plane from China that veered off a runway at Manila’s airport and lost an engine and a wheel after landing hard in a rainstorm recalled Friday their brush with the terrifying mishap, with some of the 165 people on board expecting the worst.

The Boeing 737-800, carrying 157 passengers and eight crew members from China’s coastal city of Xiamen, managed to touch down close to midnight amid a downpour after aborting an initial attempt to land due to poor visibility, according to Philippine officials, who expressed relief that a disaster was avoided.

The airliner lost contact with the tower as it rolled off the runway into a rain-soaked field, where one of the plane’s engines and wheels got ripped off before everyone on board scrambled out through an emergency slide, the officials said.

A Filipino American from California, Ruben Lopez Espinas, thought the plane would crash. “I surrendere­d myself. I said, ‘Lord, I am yours if it’s really my time,’ ” he said.

Chinese passenger Wang Xun Qun embraced her teen daughter during the tense moments before the aircraft landed. When asked to describe their experience, the two repeatedly said, “Scary, scary.”

Chen Lei, who was on the plane with friends, said the plane touched down but pulled up steeply in a 90-degree angle a few seconds after it aborted the first landing. “My palm started to sweat,” he said.

When it did land, the plane glided for about five seconds and then the wing and the engine under it hit the ground, with Chen witnessing the unfolding danger from a window. “The luggage fell down and many equipment inside the plane started to fall. I also smelled heavy smoke,” he said.

Then the plane suddenly came to an abrupt stop.

Shaken by the experience and drenched by the downpour, the passengers and crew of Xiamen Air Flight 8667 were taken to an airport terminal, where they were given blankets and food before going to a hotel, airport general manager Ed Monreal and other officials said.

“With God’s blessing, all passengers and the crew were able to evacuate safely and no injuries except for about four who had some superficia­l scratches,” Monreal said.

The plane failed to land at first apparently due to poor visibility that may have hindered the pilots’ view of the runway, Director-General of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s Jim Sydiongco told reporters. The plane circled before finally landing near midnight but lost contact with the tower, Sydiongco said.

Investigat­ors retrieved the plane’s flight recorder and will get the cockpit voice recorder once the aircraft has been lifted to determine the cause of the accident, Sydiongco said.

Torrential monsoon rains enhanced by a tropical storm flooded many low-lying areas of Manila and northern provinces last weekend, displacing thousands of residents and forcing officials to shut schools and government offices. The weather has improved with sporadic downpours.

 ?? Bullit Marquez / Associated Press ?? Workers at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport in suburban Pasay city southeast of Manila prepared to remove the Xiamen Air Boeing 737-800 that carried 157 passengers and eight crew members.
Bullit Marquez / Associated Press Workers at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport in suburban Pasay city southeast of Manila prepared to remove the Xiamen Air Boeing 737-800 that carried 157 passengers and eight crew members.

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