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VIDEO SPECIAL: Terror for travellers after 747 is ‘holed’
 
 

Shaken but relieved airline passengers were tonight continuing their journeys after surviving a terrifying ordeal in which a gaping hole appeared in their jumbo jet 30,000ft up.

Flooring gave way, part of the ceiling collapsed and debris flew into the first class cabin on the Qantas Boeing 747 which was flying from London to Melbourne.

Scared passengers, some of whom were woken up by a loud bang, had to don oxygen masks as the plane descended after losing cabin pressure on the Hong Kong-Melbourne leg of the flight today.

Film shot by passengers and displayed on websites showed the scenes on board the plane as the captain announced that he was making for Manila in the Philippines for an emergency landing.

Passengers spoke of "part of the ceiling" flying past them, while others told how children were crying. Some aboard vomited after the plane managed to land safely at Manila, with all 346 passengers and 19 crew able to disembark normally.

On film, applause for the crew from the passengers as the plane touched down could clearly be heard.

As air accident investigators probed the cause of the incident, passengers, who spent Thursday night in Manila, were flying on to Melbourne in a replacement Qantas Boeing 747.

Initial investigations suggested that a section of fuselage had separated and that there had been an "explosive decompression".

Pictures of the stricken plane at Manila showed a large hole in the aircraft's fuselage through which luggage could be seen.

Debra Manchester, a housewife from Buckinghamshire, was sitting in first class when the incident began.

She told The Times Online: "Newspapers and what looked like part of the ceiling flew past me. We didn't know what was happening to the plane. After a while, things calmed down and there was a deadly silence.

"There was still debris all around our feet but we all started to feel a bit safer when we could take our masks off."

Mrs Manchester said luggage was "hanging out" of the hole where the hold had been, and the emergency door above appeared to have come loose.

She claimed that 20 minutes after the plane first took off from Heathrow, she heard a loud bang near one of the doors.

"You have to wonder if that explosion could have caused the second one," she said.

Phil Restall, from London, said he was woken "with a jolt" by the loud bang before the plane descended rapidly.

He told the BBC News website: "No-one panicked, there was no screaming. It wasn't your typical television movie. Everyone listened to the cabin staff."

He said other passengers had told him young children in the main cabin were crying.

Mr Restall, who was reassured to see the engines "still spinning", said they wore the oxygen masks for about 15 minutes, until the plane levelled out.

The pilot then told passengers they were going to land in Manila to have a look at the damage.

Mr Restall went on: "Everyone was fairly calm, partly because they didn't realise the extent of it. After we disembarked it started to dawn on people that this was a major incident. There were 350 people up there who were very lucky.

"Seeing the hole caused a lot of emotion. People were physically shaking. Many realised how close they were to their own mortality."

Robin McGeechan, 42, from the Midlands, said he heard a loud bang after the aircraft had taken off from Hong Kong.

He went on: "Incredibly there wasn't much panic on board, but obviously a lot of people were pretty scared. We were told by the crew that a door had popped but that obviously wasn't the case.

"We only realised what the true situation was when we saw the great big hole after the plane landed."

Manila airport spokesman Octavio Lina said: "There is a big hole in the belly of the aircraft near the right wing, about three metres in diameter.

"Upon disembarkation, there were some passengers who vomited. You can see in their faces that they were really scared."

Qantas chief executive Geoff Dixon said: "All 346 passengers and 19 crew disembarked normally and there were no reports of any injuries to passengers or crew."

He added that the flight crew performed emergency procedures after oxygen masks were deployed. Initial inspections revealed the aircraft sustained a hole in its fuselage, and it was being inspected by engineers.

Praising the crew, he said: "This was a highly unusual situation and our crew responded with the professionalism that Qantas is known for."

Publication date 25/07/08

Posted by: andy3127, Troon on 11:48am Fri 25 Jul 08
check out the same article on sky news website....i think someone at the Evening Times has been using the Copy and Paste facility for this story!!
Posted by: Scott, Airdrie on 12:55pm Fri 25 Jul 08
andy3127 wrote:
check out the same article on sky news website....i think someone at the Evening Times has been using the Copy and Paste facility for this story!!
What, because the quotes from the Manila airport spokesman are the same? They have to be - they're quotes!! or is it because they refer to the same facts? Would you rather they made up different things?
Posted by: Big Al, Paisley on 2:04pm Fri 25 Jul 08
andy3127 wrote:
check out the same article on sky news website....i think someone at the Evening Times has been using the Copy and Paste facility for this story!!
Probably because they both used the same news agency release...Reuters or Associated Press no doubt. Or maybe the ET should have depatched a reporter out there ? Not exactly local news though.

Anyhow, what's interesting is the exposed luggage in that shot, nornally it would be containerised in the hold of a 747, which begs the question, did the container 'rupture' somehow ? Could be a cargo door failure, similar to the two DC-10 incidents in the 70's, one of which made a similar eventuallly safe landing and the other ended up in a million pieces across a French woodland.
Posted by: Mikeyd, Los Angeles on 2:59pm Fri 25 Jul 08
Scott wrote:
andy3127 wrote: check out the same article on sky news website....i think someone at the Evening Times has been using the Copy and Paste facility for this story!!
What, because the quotes from the Manila airport spokesman are the same? They have to be - they're quotes!! or is it because they refer to the same facts? Would you rather they made up different things?
What, because the quotes from the Manila airport spokesman are the same? They have to be - they're quotes!! or is it because they refer to the same facts? Would you rather they made up different things?
I enjoy reading these boards. It's only on the odd occassion that I get annoyed by "keyboard ninja's," like yourself, who attack innocent posters with crap like this. Get a grip, you're an arse!! Go ahead, report me, you'll still be an arse.
Posted by: Moanin Minnie, Not here on 4:19pm Fri 25 Jul 08
Mikeyd, Los Angeles ... you are not a pal of Alkie NY by any chance? He rants in The Herald normally.
Posted by: The Wise One, Glasgow on 4:31pm Fri 25 Jul 08
All this ado about the hole in the plane and yet no one has commented on the fact that somewhere out there is a pidgeon with a very sore head. Where are these animal rights people when you need them most.
Posted by: yerauldda, West End Exile on 4:45pm Fri 25 Jul 08
the pidgeon has been found

jack and sawyer are fighing over who gets to eat it
Posted by: The Wise One, Glasgow on 4:52pm Fri 25 Jul 08
I am just waiting for Kenny MsAskill to announce that the cheap price of alcohol was the reason the pidgeon was 'drunk and incapable ' and didn't see the plane until it was too late.

Anyway, the pidgeon should have been wearing a crash helmet. Apparently the pidgeon cried out just before impact "F*** me, a plane"
Posted by: alan, Glasgow on 10:24pm Fri 25 Jul 08
This story has no relevance to the Glasgow/West Central Scotland area whatsoever, fair enough there is a quote from someone from the Glasgow area, but there isn't.

As well as this, Qantas has one of the best safety record out of all the western airlines, not much mention about that. As for the hole on the aircraft, sounds like a classic case of metal fatigue.
Posted by: John Kebab, Glasgow on 8:57am Sun 27 Jul 08
Some aboard vomited after the plane managed to land safely at Manila


I think there woudl have been a few that did more that just vomit, but I guess they cant really print that level of detail when it comes out the other end....
Posted by: sunnygovan, Melbourne on 10:07am Sun 27 Jul 08
It,s the same plane the Pope left Sydney in obviously the big man upstairs was looking after the pontif!
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