New Straits Times

Tibet Airlines passenger jet catches fire on runway

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A Tibet Airlines plane caught fire yesterday after veering off the runway at a Chinese airport, but all passengers and crew were “safely evacuated”, the airline said.

The flight, carrying 113 passengers and nine crew, was headed from the southweste­rn city of Chongqing to Tibet’s Nyingchi when “abnormalit­ies” were noticed and take-off was suspended, causing the jet to overrun the runway, the company said.

Images shared by Chinese state media showed flames engulfing the side of the jet as terrified passengers ran from the scene.

Photos of the aftermath showed scorch marks covering the nose and one wing of the jet, which had been doused in water to control the blaze.

“All passengers and crew have been safely evacuated,” Tibet Airlines said.

“The injured passengers were all only lightly injured, and have been sent to hospital for treatment.”

Flight TV9833 deviated from the runway during take-off and “the left side of the aircraft’s nose caught fire”, Chongqing Jiangbei Internatio­nal Airport said.

About 40 passengers with minor injuries were sent to hospital, the airport said.

Operations at Chongqing Jiangbei Internatio­nal Airport had returned to normal.

“The cause of the accident is being investigat­ed,” the airport said.

The incident comes after a China Eastern flight travelling from Kunming to Guangzhou plunged from 29,000ft into a mountainsi­de in March, killing all 132 people on board.

No reason for that crash, China’s deadliest in about 30 years, has yet been given.

Two flight recorders, or “black boxes”, were recovered and are being analysed in the United States in the hopes of unlocking the mystery behind the China Eastern jet’s rapid descent.

In the immediate aftermath of the crash, China’s ruling Communist Party moved quickly to control informatio­n, revving up its censorship machine as media outlets and residents raced to the crash site.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Rescue workers at the site where an Airbus A319 of Tibet Airlines caught fire after an aborted take-off at Chongqing Jiangbei Internatio­nal Airport in Chongqing, China, yesterday.
REUTERS PIC Rescue workers at the site where an Airbus A319 of Tibet Airlines caught fire after an aborted take-off at Chongqing Jiangbei Internatio­nal Airport in Chongqing, China, yesterday.

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