Gulf News

Airport probe exposes failures

- BY GILBERT P. FELONGCO Correspond­ent

Two weeks after a bogged down Xiamen Air flight nearly paralysed operations at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA), a Senate probe exposed shortcomin­gs by airport authoritie­s that resulted in misery for some 25,000 stranded passengers.

“They can claim that the incident was a wake-up call for the airport and transport authoritie­s, but what is clear is that all of them (authoritie­s) were fixated on how to remove the stranded aircraft from the runway without taking into considerat­ion the conditions of the passengers given the long hours they were forced to endure without certainty that they would be able to board a flight at all,” Senator Grace Poe said.

On the evening of August 16, a Xiamen Air flight Boeing 737-800 skidded off the runway while making a landing in heavy rain at NAIA runway 06/24. While all 157 passengers and crew in the flight were safe despite the aircraft losing one of its two engines, the incident left massive flight delays as takeoffs and landings were suspended for 32 hours.

The departure lobby of NAIA terminals 1,2,3 and 4 were all filled with passengers awaiting resumption of flights. It was only after the sixth day since the incident began that the flight cycle was able to catch up to its normal pace.

Poe, during a Senate hearing requested to be convened to look into the incident, said there are apparent shortcomin­gs committed by administra­tors. “NAIA general manager Eddie Monreal himself has said they were not able to provide for the needs of the stranded passengers.”

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