German investigators launch probe into Boeing 787 incident in Frankfurt


A Lufthansa Boeing is surrounded by ambulances and other emergency vehicles after several staff members were injured when the nose gear of a Boeing 787 jetliner unexpectedly collapsed at a gate at Frankfurt Airport, according to Lufthansa, in Frankfurt, Germany, June 4, 2026. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach

BERLIN, June 5 (Reuters) - ⁠The German Federal Bureau of Aircraft ⁠Accident Investigation (BFU) has begun an investigation into ‌the Boeing 787 jetliner whose nose gear collapsed on Thursday at a gate at Frankfurt airport, according ​to a BFU spokesperson.

• An ⁠interim report is ⁠expected in about eight weeks, and the final ⁠report ‌in about a year, said the spokesperson

• Lufthansa, which operated the ⁠aircraft, said several crew members and ground ​staff were ‌lightly injured and hospitalised; two Lufthansa employees ⁠who ​were briefly hospitalised on Thursday were able to leave the same day

• The affected Boeing ⁠787-9 will be repaired after ​the investigation, said Lufthansa

• Passengers had not yet boarded the aircraft

• The incident occurred at 12:45 ⁠p.m. (1045 GMT) on Thursday, and the jet was scheduled to depart for Los Angeles as flight LH450

• The Boeing 787-9 is ​a relatively new addition ⁠for the Lufthansa Group, which is planning to ​gradually phase out less ‌efficient jets and simplify its ​fleet

(Reporting by Klaus Lauer, Writing by Lena Rueckerl, Editing by Miranda Murray)

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