[Mb-civic] CBC News - NO FATALITIES IN TORONTO AIRPLANE FIRE
CBC News Online
nwonline at toronto.cbc.ca
Tue Aug 2 16:47:18 PDT 2005
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The following is a news item posted on CBC NEWS ONLINE
at http://www.cbc.ca/news
____________________________________________________
NO FATALITIES IN TORONTO AIRPLANE FIRE
WebPosted Tue Aug 2 16:25:58 2005
---All 309 people aboard a jet that overshot a runway and burst into
flames at Pearson International Airport Tuesday survived the ordeal,
according to fire officials on the scene.
There were 14 minor injuries, however.
One passenger aboard the Air France Airbus A340, Roel Bramar, told CBC
News that he saw lightning just as the plane landed in a torrential
downpour at about 3:50 p.m.
"I'm sure that the bad weather was responsible," said Bramar, who was not
injured and managed to scramble off the plane by means of an emergency
chute. He was the second person off the plane, he said.
RELATED STORY:
Everyone was 'running like crazy': passenger
Flight 358 from Paris had been scheduled to arrive at Toronto at 3:35
p.m. EDT. Something went badly wrong, and the plane overshot its intended
runway by about 200 metres.
The plane skidded off Runway 24 Left, an east-west runway laid out
parallel to one of Toronto's busiest roads, Highway 401. It ended up in
the Etobicoke Creek ravine, a small valley at the far west end of the
airport, the aircraft's fuselage tipped down and its tail in the air.
"We had a hell of a roller-coaster going down the ravine," Bramar said.
"All I could think of was 'Get off!'"
Emergency crews were still on the scene by early evening.
While cleanup efforts continued and the Transportation Safety Board of
Canada prepared to begin its investigation, all incoming flights were
being rerouted to Ottawa's airport.
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The incident happened as most operations at the airport were grounded
because of severe thunderstorms in the area.
At mid-afternoon Tuesday, a spokesperson with the Greater Toronto
Airports Authority said lightning was causing technical problems with
the airport's lightning-detection system. All aircraft were grounded
for safety reasons as a result, largely to protect crews working on
the ground.
Copyright (C) 2005 CBC. All rights reserved.
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