A
British Airways jet caught fire as it was preparing to take off from
Las Vegas, prompting the crew to abort takeoff and evacuate terrified
passengers.
“There were 159 passengers and 13 crew on the flight,” McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas said.
It added that seven people on board were treated for minor injuries.
The Federal Aviation
Administration said the fire broke out in the left engine of the
257-seat Boeing 777 shortly after 4:00 pm (2300 GMT) and the crew
immediately aborted takeoff and ordered an evacuation.
“Passengers
deplaned on the runway using emergency slides and (were) bused to the terminal,” FAA spokesman Ian Gregor told AFP.
“The aircraft, a 777-200
experienced a technical issue as it was preparing for takeoff from
McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas” heading for London.
British Airways, which said
there were two fewer passengers on board, also described the cause of
the fire as being due to a “technical issue.”
“Our crew evacuated the aircraft
safely and the fire was quickly extinguished by the emergency services
at the airport,” a company statement said. “A small number of customers
and our crew have been taken to hospital as a precaution.”
An AFP correspondent at the
airport said the blaze was quickly put out by some 50 firefighters who
rushed to the site within minutes along with other emergency vehicles.
Passengers described scenes of
panic on the plane with one witness saying there was “a lot of
screaming” as fumes filled the cabin and the crew deployed the emergency
slides.
Some of the passengers posted dramatic images and videos that showed plumes of smoke and flames engulfing the aircraft.
“Just got evacuated from our flight#BA2276 plane caught fire somehow omg,” passenger Dominic Worthington said on Twitter.
– ‘A lot of panic’ –
Jacob Steinberg, a reporter for
British daily The Guardian, said on his Twitter account that he was
asleep on the plane when it came to a “crashing halt” on the runway.
“Initially told to stay seated,
then shout of evacuate,” he said, adding that the flames had apparently
melted
some of the jet’s windows.
“They opened the back door and
slide went down and smoke started coming in plane, followed by mad dash
to front. A lot of panic,” he said.
Steinberg said the pilot later
joined the passengers inside the airport terminal and told them the fire
was caused by a “catastrophic failure of the engine.”
“The pilot looked pretty shook
up to be honest,” he said. “Has been flying for years, don’t think he
had ever seen anything like that.”
Paul Berberian, a passenger
aboard another plane that was on the tarmac at the time of the incident,
described watching in disbelief as the British Airways plane caught
fire and smoke billowed from the fuselage.
A video shot by Berberian and
aired on CNN showed the stricken plane’s passengers using evacuation
slides and running away on the tarmac as emergency vehicles rushed to
the site to douse the flames.
“We were all glued to the side of the plane watching this unfold,” he said of fellow passengers on his flight.
– ‘Gathering more information’ –
McCarran Airport said traffic on
runway number three, where the incident took place, had been suspended
but flights were operating normally from the three other runways.
Passengers from the stricken
plane were taken to a hotel near the Las Vegas strip for the night while
awaiting another flight to their destination.
“We’re aware of the incident at McCarran Airport in Las Vegas,”
Boeing said in a statement. “Our teams are currently gathering more
information.”In 2014, a British Airways plane heading to Lyon, France, was forced to turn back to London’s Heathrow Airport after a witness saw flames “spitting” out of the engine on takeoff.
Richard Aboulafia, an aviation
expert at Teal Group, said he did not believe Tuesday’s fire was linked
to any flaws with the Boeing 777.
“The 777 remains one of the
safest forms of transport ever invented,” he told AFP. “While we don’t
know about this incident, there have been no significant 777 crashes or
fires that resulted from flaws with the aircraft.”
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