Montreal Gazette

Teen who survived crash killed by fire truck

Chinese student was lying on ground when rescue vehicle ran over her

- TERRY COLLINS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN MATEO, CALIF. — A teenager survived the Asiana Airlines crash in San Francisco only to be struck and killed by a fire vehicle rushing to fight a blaze that broke out on the plane, authoritie­s said on Friday.

Ye Meng Yuan, 16, a Chinese student, died of multiple injuries from being run over by what officials believe was a special fire truck used to spread fire-suppressin­g foam.

San Francisco Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White apologized to Yuan’s family and said she was trying to arrange a meeting with them.

“It’s very difficult and devastatin­g news for all of us,” Hayes-White said.

The family was upset after learning the details of the girl’s death and wants the girl’s body returned to China, coroner Robert Foucrault said.

“It was a difficult conversati­on,” he said.

It was unclear how the teenager got from the airplane to the spot where she was killed. Investigat­ors believe she was down on the ground and not standing up during the “volatile” and “dangerous” aftermath of the plane crash, Hayes-White said.

The circumstan­ces are being investigat­ed by San Francisco police and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Foucrault declined to go into detail on how he determined the teenager was alive before she was struck, but said there was internal hemorrhagi­ng that indicated her heart was still pumping at the time.

Authoritie­s confirmed last week that Yuan was hit by a vehicle racing to extinguish flames that broke out on the Boeing 777 during the July 6 crash.

Police said she was on the ground and covered in fireretard­ant foam that rescuers had sprayed on the wreckage.

Yuan and her middle school classmate, 16-year-old Wang Linjia, died at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport. The other victim, 15-year-old Liu Yipeng, died at a hospital July 12. Dozens of others were injured, though most not seriously.

Yuan and Linjia were students at Jiangshan Middle School in Zhejiang, an affluent coastal province in eastern China, Chinese state media has reported.

They were part of a group of students and teachers from the school who were heading to summer camp in Southern California. Yuan and Linjia were seated at the back of the plane, federal investigat­ors have said.

Meanwhile, the probe into the crash itself continues. Investigat­ors have said the plane came in too low and too slow, clipping its landing gear and then its tail on a rocky seawall just short of the runway.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A firefighte­r stands by a tarpaulin sheet covering a body near the wreckage of the Asiana Flight 214 airplane on July 6.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A firefighte­r stands by a tarpaulin sheet covering a body near the wreckage of the Asiana Flight 214 airplane on July 6.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ye Meng Yuan survived the initial plane crash on July 6.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ye Meng Yuan survived the initial plane crash on July 6.

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