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Pilot safely lands jetliner in cornfield near Moscow

Putin hails ‘heroes’ as 233 emerge from plane struck by birds

- By Vladimir Isachenkov and Tom Krisher

MOSCOW — A Russian pilot whose passenger jet lost power in both engines after colliding with a flock of gulls shortly after takeoff Thursday managed to land in a cornfield smoothly enough that only one of the 233 people on board was hurt seriously enough to be hospitaliz­ed.

The quick thinking of the captain, Damir Yusupov, 41, drew comparison­s to the Jan. 15, 2009, “miracle on the Hudson,” when Capt. Chesley Sullenberg­er safely ditched his plane in New York’s Hudson River after a bird strike disabled its engines. All 155 people aboard survived the emergency landing along midtown Manhattan.

Russian television stations Thursday showed passengers standing in head-high corn next to the jetliner, hugging Yusupov and thanking him for saving their lives.

The Ural Airlines Airbus A321 was carrying 226 passengers and a crew of seven as it took off from Moscow’s Zhukovsky Airport en route to Simferopol in Crimea.

Russia’s Rosaviatsi­ya state aviation agency chief, Alexander Neradko, told reporters that the crew “made the only right decision” to land the plane after both of its engines malfunctio­ned.

The airline said Yusupov, the son of a helicopter pilot, has logged more than 3,000 flight hours. He worked as a lawyer before he changed course and joined a flight school when he was 32. A father of four, he has flown with Ural Airlines since his graduation in 2013. He became a captain last year.

Yusupov’s wife told Rossiya state television from their home in Yekaterinb­urg that he called her after landing, before she had heard about the emergency.

“He called me and said: ‘Everything is fine, everyone is alive,’ ” she said. “I asked what was it, and he said that birds hit the engine and we landed in a field. I was horrified and in panic and burst into tears.”

Russian officials rushed to shower the pilot and crew with praise.

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, hailed the pilots as “heroes” and said they will receive state awards. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev opened a session of Cabinet by praising the crew and asking the transport minister to explain what happened.

Bird strikes on planes occur regularly around the world even though airports use bird distress signals, air cannons and other means to chase them from runways. Smaller birds are usually chopped up by turbine fan blades, but engines aren’t designed to withstand strikes from multiple birds or larger birds such as geese, said John Hansman, an aeronautic­s professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Birds rarely disable both of a jet’s engines, but with two cases reported in a decade, jet makers may have to redesign future engines to better resist such a strike, Hansman said.

“That’s likely to be a discussion, just because the overall aviation system learns from incidents like this,” he said, adding that risks and probabilit­ies will have to be weighed.

 ?? RU-RTR RUSSIAN TELEVISION ?? The landing outside Moscow drew comparison­s to the 2009 “miracle on the Hudson.”
RU-RTR RUSSIAN TELEVISION The landing outside Moscow drew comparison­s to the 2009 “miracle on the Hudson.”
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Yusupov

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