Aircraft collides with security patrol car, killing two airport workers


Tragic accident: The ACT Airlines Boeing 747-400 cargo aircraft in the water after veering off the runway during landing at Hong Kong’s international airport. — AP

A cargo aircraft skidded off a Hong Kong runway and collided with a security patrol car before both fell into the sea, killing the two people in the car, authorities said. The plane’s four crew members were unhurt.

The Boeing 747, flown by Turkiye-based ACT Airlines, was landing at Hong Kong Inter­national Airport around 3.50am on arrival from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The aircraft was being operated under lease by Emirates, a long-haul carrier based in Dubai.

The captains did not seek help before landing and had taxied about halfway down the runway before skidding off it to the left yesterday, Steven Yiu, the airport authority’s executive director in airport operations, said during a press conference.

“The patrol car absolutely did not rush onto the runway.

“It was the plane that went off the runway and crashed into the patrol car outside the fence,” he said.

When rescue crews arrived, the plane was broken into two parts, floating in the sea, and the four crew members were waiting to be rescued at its open door, said Yiu Men-yeung, a fire services official.

The four crew members had no apparent injuries, said Tong Sze-ho, acting senior assistant chief ambulance officer of the fire services department.

Rescuers dove into the sea and found the two security workers trapped in the car after a 40-minute search, Yiu Men-yeung said.

Local television images at midmorning showed the aircraft partially submerged just off the edge of the airport’s sea wall.

The aircraft’s front half and cockpit were visible above water but the tail end appeared to have broken off. Two boats, possibly with search and rescue personnel, were near the aircraft.

The crash occurred on the north runway of Hong Kong’s airport, one of Asia’s busiest. That runway remained closed, while the two other runways at the airport continue to operate.

Steven Yiu said flights at the airport would be unaffected.

Weather was suitable at the time the plane landed and the cause of the crash was being investigated, he said.

The Air Accident Investigation Authority classified the case as an accident, with the investigation to look into multiple factors, including the flight’s system, operation and maintenance.

The cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder were being sought.

Emirates said the Boeing 747 freighter flying as EK9788 was wet leased and operated by ACT Airlines.

In wet leases, the company supplying the plane also provides the crew, maintenance and insurance. Emirates said there was no cargo on board.

The aircraft was 32 years old, according to Flightradar24.

Hong Kong International Airport was built on reclaimed land by merging two smaller islands north of Hong Kong’s Lantau Island in the South China Sea, at the mouth of the Pearl River.

The edge of the north runway lies only a few hundred metres from the water, while the other two runways are even closer.

Emirates, the Dubai-based long haul carrier, is known for its passenger flights coming out of Dubai International Airport, the world’s busiest for international travel.

However, it also operates a thriving cargo business out of Al Maktoum International Airport at Dubai World Central, the sheikhdom’s second airport where it plans a US$35bil improvement over the coming decade.

The ACT Airlines’ flight had taken off from Al Maktoum, known as DWC.

Emirates, owned by a sovereign wealth fund in the city-state, noted in its most-recent annual report that it had added two wet-leased Boeing 747s “to serve surging customer demand”. — AP

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