Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Plane passengers detail panic seconds before Istanbul crash

- By Zeynep Bilginsoy

ISTANBUL — Passengers on the Turkish airliner that crash-landed and crumpled into pieces in Istanbul, killing three people, say the plane’s descent felt unusually fast and left those on board screaming and panicking.

Engin Demir, who was among the 180 people injured in the crash, told NTV television that he really noticed the speed as the Boeing 737 operated by low-cost Pegasus Airline landed Wednesday night at Sabiha Gokcen Airport.

Coming in amid strong winds and heavy rain, the plane overshot the runway. It skidded about 165 to 200 feet before dropping into a steep ditch, according to the city’s governor, Ali Yerlikaya. The 11-year-old plane broke into three pieces, forcing passengers to squeeze out through cracks in the plane’s fuselage or climb onto its damaged wings.

“With the speed, I think it was not able to stop. It all happened in 2-3 seconds,” Demir said from his hospital bed in Istanbul.

Demir said he was temporaril­y trapped by debris falling from the luggage compartmen­t.

“There were screams and shouts. I tried to calm people around me. Help soon arrived,” he said.

Another survivor, Alper Kulu, told the DHA news agency that the flight was “abnormal from the start to the finish.”

“It was a very turbulent flight. The plane touched down with difficulty. It was very speedy compared to other flights,” he said, noting with irony that “a ‘Welcome to Istanbul’ announceme­nt was made after the wheels touched down.”

He said the plane swayed left and right, then dipped as it fell into the ditch. He said the impact of the landing flipped the fixed seats in front of him completely around. Despite a broken arm, he struggled to get out quickly and climb up the ditch, fearing the plane could erupt in flames.

“There was panic and shouting. Everyone was calling for help,” he said. “I heard announceme­nts that the plane could explode.”

The plane, which carried 177 passengers and six crew members from the western Turkish city of Izmir, included people from 12 countries. Officials said the three dead were Turkish citizens.

Investigat­ors were looking at many possible causes, including speed and the weather.

Pegasus Airlines CEO

Mehmet T. Nane told a news conference Thursday in Istanbul that the plane’s black boxes had been retrieved and were being deciphered.

Turkey’s Anadolu news agency reported that prosecutor­s were taking statements from two air traffic control staff and two airport employees, as well as from pilots flying two other planes who decided to abort their landings amid bad weather at the airport shortly before the Pegasus flight.

Anadolu said the copilot, who it identified with the initials F.P., was critically injured and was receiving treatment at the private American Hospital in Istanbul. Dutch officials said the co-pilot was Dutch. The captain, identified as M.A., was also hospitaliz­ed but not as badly hurt.

Work continued at the crash site Thursday as investigat­ors examined the wreckage, crews took apart the plane’s interior and police and the Turkish military guarded the site. While crews pumped out the plane’s remaining fuel, a group of insurance officials arrived to inspect the scene. Flights resumed at the airport early Thursday with some delays and cancellati­ons.

 ?? OZAN KOSE/GETTY-AFP ?? A worker inspects the wreckage of the Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 Thursday in Turkey.
OZAN KOSE/GETTY-AFP A worker inspects the wreckage of the Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 Thursday in Turkey.

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