A Toronto-bound Fly Jamaica airplane is seen after crash-landing at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport in Georgetown, Guyana yesterday. (Photos: AFP) —
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Ten people were injured in scenes described as “chaos” as a Boeing airliner carrying 118 passengers and eight crew members crash-landed in Guyana’s capital, Georgetown yesterday, skidding to a halt just before a steep drop.
The Fly Jamaica Airways plane was bound for Toronto, when it suffered a hydraulic problem shortly after takeoff and returned to the airport, crashing and careening off the runway, Transportation Minister David Patterson said.
“Everyone was going crazy, screaming, crying for their lives, everything,” said passenger Invor Bedessee, describing how some people were injured getting off the flight.
“There were (some people) injured because of coming down the slide or not getting off the flight fast enough, so the people behind them were kicking them,” he told Canada’s public broadcaster CBC.
“There was a lot of chaos.”
Bedessee said takeoff had been delayed by about 45 minutes because one of the left-side doors had “not closed properly” and a maintenance crew was called to fix the problem.
Patterson said the injuries to six passengers were not life-threatening and the wounded were taken to a hospital near the airport in the country on South America’s North Atlantic coast, which shares its northwestern border with Venezuela.
Guyana’s Chief Medical Officer, Shamdeo Persaud, said five people had been referred to another hospital for “further investigation” for spinal injuries.
The 118 passengers on board the Boeing 757-200 included 82 Canadians.”To date, we have no reports of any Canadian citizens being injured,” said government spokesman Philip Hannan in Ottawa.
“Canadian consular officials are in contact with local authorities and stand ready to provide consular assistance to Canadian citizens if needed.”
After departing at 2:10 am (0610 GMT), the pilot reported a problem with the hydraulic system 10 minutes into the flight.
“We flew about 10, 15 minutes in the air, just over the Atlantic ocean, and we were circling around a few times and the captain announced there’s some hydraulic problems, and we had to return to the airport,” Bedessee told CBC.
“When we landed on the ground, the wheels were still spinning, they were not braking, there was no hydraulic brakes to brake the wheels and then we overshot the runway,” the still-shaken passenger said.
Pictures showed the plane had ground to a halt in the sand just short of a steep incline.
“One of the wings came apart and the engine on the right side actually flipped over and we crashed into a big sand pile at the edge of a cliff. There’s a big drop about 30, 40 feet (nine to 12 metres) on the other side,” said Bedessee.
“If we had 10 more feet, we would be down in the cliff, down in the ditch. It was a miracle.”
Bedessee said the incident had left him “very shaken and very, I don’t know, nervous.”
“It’s like all of my goose-bumps are going crazy, just it’s a shock and awe, more or less,” he said.
Guyanese police and soldiers secured the crash site for investigators to begin working. The US National Transportation Safety Board was alerted.
“We can confirm that Fly Jamaica flight OJ256 bound for Toronto has returned to Georgetown with a technical problem and has suffered an accident on landing,” the airline said.
“At this time, we believe that all 118 passengers and eight crew members are safe. We are providing local assistance and will release further information as soon as it is available,” it added.
The plane with its eight crew members of six Guyanese and two Jamaicans, also had on board one American, 35 Guyanese, one Pakistani and a Trinidadian.
Patterson said that the flight departed Guyana at 2:10 am (local time) yesterday and at 2:21 am, the pilot indicated “there was some hydraulic problem and he requested permission to return and he did”.
On landing, the emergency services were activated and since then an investigator from the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority has taken responsibility for the crash site.
Fly Jamaica Airways was certified by the Jamaica Civil Aviation Authority (JCAA) in September 2012, and was cleared to operate in the United States by US authorities in December.
On November 16, last year, the airline formed by a Guyanese businessman and three Jamaican shareholders, was given permission by the Guyana Government to begin direct flights between Guyana and Cuba.
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