An Air Busan airplane caught fire at an airport in Busan, South Korea, on Tuesday night time, forcing all passengers and crew members to evacuate, officers mentioned.
The airplane, an Airbus A321, had been scheduled to fly to Hong Kong from Gimhae Worldwide Airport, fireplace officers mentioned, when a fireplace broke out close to its tail at round 10:30 p.m., earlier than takeoff.
All 176 folks on board — 169 passengers, six flight attendants and a flight engineer — escaped by evacuation slides, South Korea’s Transport Ministry mentioned in an announcement. Some minor accidents have been reported, and no less than two of the passengers have been hospitalized with bruises they suffered whereas evacuating, the Transport Ministry mentioned.
Movies and pictures of the blaze broadcast on native media confirmed fireplace engines battling flames on the airplane’s fuselage as smoke billowed off the plane. The plane’s inflatable evacuation slides have been deployed. Round 11:30 p.m., the fireplace was extinguished, the fireplace division mentioned.
It was not instantly clear what had triggered the blaze. Investigators from the Transport Ministry and its Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board will examine the matter, the ministry mentioned.
Air Busan, a low-cost service that operates home and worldwide flights to and from Busan, is a subsidiary of Asiana Airways, one among South Korea’s two principal airways. The airplane had arrived in Busan from Jeju simply earlier than 9 p.m. native time, in accordance with Flightradar24, a flight monitoring service.
Days earlier, the nation’s transportation officers had urged low-cost airline carriers to prioritize security over revenue, following a crash final month that was the worst aviation disaster ever on South Korean soil. That crash, during which a Boeing 737-800 operated by Jeju Air smashed into a concrete wall at Muan International Airport, killed 179 folks and raised questions over aviation security measures.
A safety inspection by the Transport Ministry discovered that seven South Korean airports and several other of the nation’s airways have been breaching current security requirements.
The airplane that caught fireplace on Tuesday had the registration quantity HL7763, the Transport Ministry mentioned, and was listed as Flight ABL391. It’s a 17-year-old Airbus A321-200 in-built 2007, in accordance with the ministry’s Aviation Technical Information System. It had been operated by Air Busan’s mum or dad firm, Asiana Airways, till it was handed over to Air Busan in Might 2017, in accordance with Transport Ministry data.
Airbus and Asiana Airways didn’t instantly reply to requests for remark.
The airplane seats 195 passengers and is one among eight such plane operated by Air Busan, in accordance with Cirium, an aviation information agency. It’s leased to the airline from AerCap, an Irish firm that leases jets to carriers world wide.
The jet was in-built 2007 and makes use of engines manufactured by Worldwide Aero Engines, a three way partnership of Pratt & Whitney, Japanese Aero Engine Company and MTU Aero Engines in Germany.
Globally, there are greater than 1,500 airplanes in lively service from the identical A321 era because the jet concerned within the incident, in accordance with Cirium information. The oldest are greater than 30 years previous, which specialists say isn’t uncommon or unsafe, offered the jets are effectively maintained.