header logo
Mogo Academy
Latest
At least 18 killed, more than 100 injured in India plane crash
Aug 08, 202004:03 PM
At least 18 killed, more than 100 injured in India plane crash
Mobitel Inner

At least 18 people were killed and more than 100 others injured when a passenger jet skidded off a hilltop runway after landing in heavy rain in the southern city of Kozhikode in Kerala, India.

 

Hardeep Singh Puri, the Indian civil aviation minister, told ANI news agency on Saturday 18 people including two pilots were killed in Friday’s “unfortunate” crash.

 

Some 127 people were being treated at hospital, he said. An investigation will be launched to determine the cause of the crash.

 

Local TV news channels showed passengers, some of them lying motionless on stretchers, brought into a hospital surrounded by health workers wearing masks because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

TV visuals showed the aircraft’s nose smashed into a brick wall, with much of the middle of the plane pulverised.

 

Passenger Renjith Panangad, 34, recalled the plane touching the ground and then everything went “blank”.

 

“After the crash, the emergency door opened and I dragged myself out somehow,” he told AFP news agency from a hospital bed in Kozhikode. “The front part of the plane was gone - it was completely gone. I don’t know how I made it but I’m grateful. I am still shaken.”

 

The Air India Express flight from Dubai to Kozhikode, also called Calicut, was repatriating Indians stranded overseas amid the coronavirus pandemic. The plane was carrying 190 passengers and crew, the Ministry of Civil Aviation said in a statement. Among them were 10 infants.

 

Abdul Karim, a senior Kerala state police officer, said at least 15 of the injured were in critical condition.

 

“Fuel had leaked out so it was a miracle that the plane did not catch fire, the toll could have been much higher,” one senior emergency official at the scene said.

 

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted he was “pained by the plane accident”.

 

Kozhikode’s 2,850-metre (9,350-foot) runway is on a flat hilltop with deep gorges on either side ending in a 34-metre (112-foot) drop.

 

The plane’s fuselage split into two as it fell into a valley 10 metres (30 feet) below, authorities said.

 

“The incident happened because of heavy rains and poor visibility. This is truly devastating,” Amitabh Kant, who heads the government’s planning commission, told NDTV news channel.

 

A similar tragedy was narrowly avoided at the same airport a year ago, when an Air India Express flight suffered a tail strike upon landing. None of the 180 passengers of that flight was injured.

 

The airport’s runway end safety area was expanded in 2018 to accommodate wide-body aircraft.

 

The runway end safety area meets United Nations international civil aviation requirements, but the UN agency recommends a buffer that is 150 metres (492 feet) longer than what exists at Kozhikode airport, according to Harro Ranter, chief executive of the Aviation Safety Network online database.

 

Air India Express is a subsidiary of Air India.

 

Friday’s crash is the worst passenger aircraft accident in the country since 2010, when an Air India Express flight, also from Dubai, overshot the runway and slid down a hill while landing in the southern Indian city of Mangalore, killing 158 people.

 

The flight was one of hundreds in recent months to bring home tens of thousands of Indians stranded abroad by the coronavirus pandemic, many of them in Gulf countries.

 

“Fuel had leaked out so it was a miracle that the plane did not catch fire, the toll could have been much higher,” one senior emergency official at the scene said.

 

Source: Aljazeera
-Agencies

 

 

 

MostRead
Mobitel Upahara
VideoStories
“AI and digital platforms reshaping global media” 'Media Fest 2026' delves on future of journalism

“AI and digital platforms reshaping global media” 'Media Fest 2026' delves on future of journalism

"Public interest must be prioritized" Govt.'s move to extend retirement age of judges hits roadblock

"Public interest must be prioritized" Govt.'s move to extend retirement age of judges hits roadblock

How can Sri Lanka bypass secondary sanctions? Ex-Foreign Sec. explains SL's options on Hyde Park

How can Sri Lanka bypass secondary sanctions? Ex-Foreign Sec. explains SL's options on Hyde Park

“Tsunami towers are not used to detect disasters”-DMC Chief bemoans lack of resources

“Tsunami towers are not used to detect disasters”-DMC Chief bemoans lack of resources

“AI and digital platforms reshaping global media”  'Media Fest 2026' delves on future of journalism

“AI and digital platforms reshaping global media” 'Media Fest 2026' delves on future of journalism

"Public interest must be prioritized" Govt.'s move to extend retirement age of judges hits roadblock

"Public interest must be prioritized" Govt.'s move to extend retirement age of judges hits roadblock

How can Sri Lanka bypass secondary sanctions? Ex-Foreign Sec. explains SL's options on Hyde Park

How can Sri Lanka bypass secondary sanctions? Ex-Foreign Sec. explains SL's options on Hyde Park

“Tsunami towers are not used to detect disasters” - DMC Chief bemoans lack of resources

“Tsunami towers are not used to detect disasters” - DMC Chief bemoans lack of resources

Govt exerting influence over country's judiciary – Opposition Leader accuses

Govt exerting influence over country's judiciary – Opposition Leader accuses

Sri Lanka to strengthen preparedness for potential El Niño-related climate changes

Sri Lanka to strengthen preparedness for potential El Niño-related climate changes

Sri Lanka’s dengue death toll rises to 47 as cases exceed 67,000

Sri Lanka’s dengue death toll rises to 47 as cases exceed 67,000

Middle East conflict disruptions weigh heavily on Asia’s economic outlook, ADB warns

Middle East conflict disruptions weigh heavily on Asia’s economic outlook, ADB warns

Dengue cases remain high in Western Provincewith nearly 35,000 cases reported

Dengue cases remain high in Western Provincewith nearly 35,000 cases reported

Appeals Court postpones further consideration of Suresh Sallay’s petition until July 14

Appeals Court postpones further consideration of Suresh Sallay’s petition until July 14

Opposition Leader accuses govt of exploiting parliamentary rules to silence MPs

Opposition Leader accuses govt of exploiting parliamentary rules to silence MPs

Lassana Flora