logo
#

Latest news with #airplanecrash

Small plane goes down at New Jersey airport in 'mass casualty' emergency
Small plane goes down at New Jersey airport in 'mass casualty' emergency

Fox News

time02-07-2025

  • General
  • Fox News

Small plane goes down at New Jersey airport in 'mass casualty' emergency

A small airplane crashed Wednesday in New Jersey, officials said. The Gloucester County Emergency Management said multiple agencies were assisting with the "mass casualty incident" near Cross Keys Airport in Monroe Township. The airport serves mostly private passenger planes. Fox News Digital has reached out to the agency. Details about how many people were aboard the aircraft were not immediately available. Gloucester County OEM was asking people to avoid the area.

WATCH — Is seat 11A really the safest seat on an airplane?
WATCH — Is seat 11A really the safest seat on an airplane?

CBC

time20-06-2025

  • CBC

WATCH — Is seat 11A really the safest seat on an airplane?

Flying is still the safest mode of transport, experts say CONTENT WARNING: This story contains information about people dying in plane crashes. Consider reading it with a trusted adult. It's common to have an emotional reaction to the news. Is there really a 'safest seat' on an airplane? On June 12, an Air India flight crashed minutes after takeoff in the Indian city of Ahmedabad. Several people on the ground died, along with 241 on board. One passenger survived. Why kids should still feel safe to fly despite deadly D.C. plane crash Vishwashkumar Ramesh was that sole survivor, and was sitting in seat 11A. He jumped through a nearby emergency exit after the crash. So why has seat 11A gone viral online? Turns out Thai singer and actor James Ruangsak Loychusak — who was one of the survivors of a deadly 1998 Thai Airways plane crash — sat in the same seat. 'That was an uncanny coincidence,' he told India's The Telegraph Online after the crash. 'The kind that gives you goosebumps.' CBC Kids News was not able to confirm that he was actually sitting in seat 11A, but it turns out it may not really matter. Check the video below to find out more about seat 11A from CBC Kids News contributor Ainara Alleyne. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ Why your seat choice doesn't really matter Aviation experts say plane crashes are random, and any seat can improve your survivability depending on the unique aspects of a crash. These include things like the way the aircraft breaks apart, the type of impact, where someone is sitting and timing, for example. All about airplanes: Aviation experts answer kids' questions about flying 'Each accident is different, and it is impossible to predict survivability based on seat location,' Mitchell Fox, a director at Flight Safety Foundation, a U.S.-based non-profit, told Reuters. Two men in plane crashes more than 20 years apart both survived sitting in seat 11A. On the left is the recent crash involving a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft in Ahmedabad, India. The image on the right depicts the 1998 crash of a Thai Airways Airbus A310 in Surat Thani, Thailand. Image credit: (Adnan Abidi/Reuters, and Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images) Also, seat 11A isn't in the same spot on every airplane and may not always be as close to an emergency exit. That being said, experts say sitting near an emergency exit can improve chances of evacuation in less severe crashes. In any case, don't let all this talk of crashes scare you — flying is still by far the safest mode of transportation. You're more likely to be struck by lightning than end up in a plane crash, experts say. Have more questions? Want to tell us how we're doing? Use the 'send us feedback' link below. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ With files from Natalie Stechyson/CBC News

Airplane crash-lands in Wisconsin lake, pilot rescued by witness
Airplane crash-lands in Wisconsin lake, pilot rescued by witness

Yahoo

time20-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Airplane crash-lands in Wisconsin lake, pilot rescued by witness

DANIELS, Wis. (WFRV) – The FAA is investigating an airplane crash in northwestern Wisconsin after a plane crash-landed in a lake on Wednesday afternoon. The Burnett County Sheriff's Office posted about the incident on its Facebook page, saying dispatch got a call around 3:15 p.m. on June 18 reporting that an airplane had crashed into Mud Hen Lake in the Town of Daniels. WisDOT shares the importance of burn management When authorities arrived, the pilot had already safely gotten out of the plane and was on a pontoon after being rescued by a Good Samaritan. Deputies say that the pilot was the only occupant in the airplane. The pilot of the 1979 Cessna U206G was identified as a 79-year-old man from Hudson. The FAA is reportedly investigating the crash. No additional information was provided. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

NTSB investigators find San Diego jet was flying too low on its descent path before fiery crash
NTSB investigators find San Diego jet was flying too low on its descent path before fiery crash

CNN

time18-06-2025

  • General
  • CNN

NTSB investigators find San Diego jet was flying too low on its descent path before fiery crash

Federal agencies Air travel safety Airplane crashesFacebookTweetLink Follow The private jet that crashed into a San Diego neighborhood last month was too low on its descent path for more than a mile before clipping power lines less than 100 feet above the ground, National Transportation Safety Board investigators said Wednesday. The new findings are part of a preliminary report from the NTSB on the fiery May 22 crash that killed all six on board including music agent Dave Shapiro, who was piloting the Cessna Citation jet, and famed rock drummer Daniel Williams. The crash occurred before sunrise in thick fog and low visibility as the overnight flight from Teterboro, New Jersey, was lining up to land at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport. Newly released data from the NTSB shows the jet reached a prescribed descent point roughly 3 miles from the runway already too low, then the plane continued to descend to a mere 60 feet above ground level. The preliminary report does not specify why the flight was too low on the approach path. Investigators say they are still analyzing the plane's cockpit voice recorder. NTSB investigators found parts of the plane's tail near 90- to 95-foot-high power transmission lines, which they classified in the report as the 'first identified point of contact.' The main parts of the wreckage, including the passenger cabin and left wing, came to rest in a neighborhood street about a quarter of a mile away, the NTSB said. Nobody on the ground was seriously hurt by the impact, though the NTSB said eight people on the ground received minor injuries. Compounding problems, the airport's automatic weather reporting system was out of service, causing air traffic controllers to relay to Shapiro the conditions at the nearby Marine Corps Air Station Miramar some four miles away. The NTSB noted part of the airport's lighting system that helps guide pilots in low visibility approaches was out of service since 2022. The report does not find a probable cause, which is due in a final report typically published within two years of the crash. Correction: A previous version of this story gave the wrong day for the release of the NTSB report. It was released Wednesday.

‘She was a wonder': relatives mourn victims of Air India plane crash
‘She was a wonder': relatives mourn victims of Air India plane crash

The Guardian

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

‘She was a wonder': relatives mourn victims of Air India plane crash

As he dropped off his only daughter at Ahmedabad airport on Thursday morning, Suraj Mistry seized the opportunity to take one final family selfie before she went back to London. Kinal Mistry, 24, had laughed lovingly at her father as he made her firmly promise that they would meet again soon. 'Yes, Daddy, very soon,' she said. Instead, the photo – of Kinal smiling beside her mother and father – would commemorate the last time his family was a whole. In scenes of horror that have since reverberated around the world, just a few minutes after the flight took off from the runway of Ahmedabad airport, it plummeted from the sky, exploding in an inferno of fire and black smoke. Only one of the 242 people onboard survived. Yet even as fragmented bodies and charred limbs continued to be uncovered by rescue teams from the site of the crash, Mistry could not bring himself to accept that Kinal – whom he described as a beautiful dancer 'so full of life' – was among the dead. Like so many on board, her body had yet to be identified, let alone given back to the family. Sitting in the Civil hospital in Ahmedabad, still in the same clothes he wore when he took his daughter to the airport, Mistry was among hundreds of families desperately waiting for answers and clinging to diminishing hope. 'What can I say about Kinal? She was a wonder,' said Mistry, as he began to cry. 'She lit up every room with her smile, she could strike up a friendship with anyone. She was beautiful, inside and out. That's just who she was.' Her life was only just beginning, he said. She had just got married and moved to London last year where she worked as a choreographer and had also set up a food business out of her own kitchen, as 'she loved nothing more than feeding people'. He said: 'In just one day, our whole world has fallen apart. I don't know if it makes me foolish, but I'm still hoping. Hoping for a miracle. Please, just one miracle.' The true scale of the tragedy was still unfolding on Friday, as images and accounts of those who were onboard Air India flight 171 began to gradually trickle out and the true death toll – officially about 265 – still remained unclear. The government Civil hospital in Ahmedabad appeared overwhelmed with the scale of bodies in the morgue and the task of identifying them, with only about six returned to families by Friday. More than 200 relatives flocked to a makeshift centre in the hospital medical college to give DNA samples to help identify the bodies, many which were brought to the hospital morgue mangled beyond recognition. Officials said some had been reduced almost to ash. What was clear was that the disaster had wrought untold devastation on hundreds of families across India and the UK. Prateek Joshi, a radiologist who worked at a hospital in Derby, had boarded the flight with his wife, Komi Vyas, also a doctor, and their three children, ready for the whole family to start their new life together in the UK. In their excitement, they all crammed into one final photo together just before takeoff; mother and father beaming in the foreground, their five-year-old twin sons Nakul and Pradyut and their eight-year-old daughter Miraya smiling from the seats in the next aisle. For another passenger, Sahil Salim Ibrahim Patel, from a small village in Gujarat, this was his first ever international flight, en route to London for a dream scholarship that he believed would change his family's life forever. Meanwhile, Prakash Lal Minarhia, who had been working as a chef in London for 15 years, had come back to India to perform the rituals for the recent death of his father. Minarhia's relatives said they still had not been able to bring themselves to inform his mother and wife, who remained in their village, about the crash. 'Until we have his body, nothing is certain,' said Uday Lal Minarhia, 48, a farmer. Rescuers and forensic teams continued to scour the wreckage on Friday amid scorching temperatures. Naresh Soni, an officer from the National Forensic Sciences University, said the teams were 'not only racing against time, but also intense heat. With each passing hour in these extreme temperatures, the risk of biological sample degradation and contamination rises sharply – possibly making the identification of bodies difficult and potentially unreliable.' As it crashed to the ground, the plane collided with a residential hostel housing hundreds of medical students, who were studying at the nearby medical college. Many were eating lunch when the 227-tonne plane smashed down, obliterating the canteen wall and killing at least five students, with at least 50 more injured. Yet many who had been in the vicinity of the hostel – which stood blackened and ominously empty on Friday – still remained missing, yet to be counted among the official dead. As Anita Ben Thakur arrived at the crash site, which was cordoned off by police, she demanded to be let through the barricades. 'Let me through, let me through, my mother is inside,' she pleaded with police, before breaking down in tears. Her mother, Sarla Ben, had been the cook in the hostel canteen for the past 15 years and had been serving food to the student doctors at Thursday lunchtime. She had also brought her two-year-old granddaughter to work with her. Neither have been seen since. 'Since yesterday, I've been trying to find my mother, but I've failed miserably,' she said. 'I've running around the entire night, and waiting outside the hospital patiently, hoping for some news – but nothing. And now, they're not even allowing us near the debris to look for her ourselves.' Sitting on the pavement outside the hospital morgue, Suresh Bhai Patni, 39, a rickshaw driver, put his head in his hands. On Thursday afternoon, as he did most days, his 15-year-old son Aakash Patni had gone to deliver lunch to his mother at the tea stall she ran, situated just outside the student hostel. The family would meet at the stall every evening. At the moment his mother, Sita Devi, sat down to eat, and Aakash was watching over the tea, the plane hit the hostel and immediately engulfed the stall in flames. Devi ran towards the stall in an attempt to save her son, and was caught up in the fire, but to no avail. Aakash's charred corpse was later recovered by the authorities. Devi survived but is seriously ill with burns over more than half of her body. 'She keeps asking me about Aakash, but I just tell her he is also being treated,' said Patno. 'How do I tell her the truth? I'm afraid she'll lose the will to survive. And I can't afford to lose her too. Not now. Not after this.' Yet among the grief, many clung to what they saw as a single miracle to emerge from the tragedy; the sole survivor, 38-year-old British-Indian Vishwash Kumar Ramesh. Still confined to a hospital bed, he had only bruises and scratches to show for the incident. Speaking to the Indian state broadcaster, the only outlet allowed into the hospital ward on Friday, Ramesh still remained hazy about how he had survived, but it appeared he had jumped out of the emergency exit door. 'I still can't believe how I got out alive,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store