An
Indonesian plane carrying over 130 passengers missed the runway at Bali
airport Saturday and landed in the sea, leaving dozens injured but no
fatalities.
The
Boeing 737-800 operated by budget airline Lion Air, a rapidly expanding
carrier which recently sealed blockbuster orders for hundreds of new
planes but is banned from US and European airspace over safety concerns
broke into two as it landed in the sea.
Passengers
screamed in terror as the plane missed the runway at the popular resort
island’s Denpasar airport, a strange occurrence, as the weather was
okay and visibility good.
The
plane came to rest partially submerged in the water not far from the
end of the runway, with inflatable slides deployed from the front exits
and a gaping crack in the fuselage towards the rear.
“The
plane was about to land when suddenly it fell into the sea. People on
board panicked and began screaming,” said a passenger named Dewi, with
light head injuries.
“There
were 45 passengers who needed hospital treatment after being injured,
but I cannot say whether their injuries were light or serious,” said an
airport spokeswoman.
Transport
ministry official Herry Bhakti initially said the plane overshot the
runway, but later clarified his comments to say it landed straight in
the water.
Officials said they were still trying to determine why the plane missed the runway.
A
Lion Air spokesman said the aircraft was arriving from the city of
Bandung in West Java province with 101 passengers and seven crew members
on board. The passengers included 95 adults, five children, and one
baby.
He
said the aircraft was relatively new, having started operating in 2012,
and that the national transportation safety committee “will investigate
the cause of the incident”.
“The plane broke into two pieces,” he said, adding that “judging from visual observation, the plane cannot be used any more”.
Bali is a hugely popular holiday destination, welcoming millions of foreign tourists from around the world every year.
Three
foreigners were on board the Lion Air flight — a Frenchman, a
Singaporean woman and a Singaporean man, according to the airport’s head
of communications.
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