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  • Flights resume at Istanbul airport after plane crash kills 3

Flights resume at Istanbul airport after plane crash kills 3

An officer stands guard near the Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737-86J plane wreckage after it overran the Sabiha Gokcen airport runway in Istanbul during landing and crashed. (Reuters)
An officer stands guard near the Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737-86J plane wreckage after it overran the Sabiha Gokcen airport runway in Istanbul during landing and crashed. (Reuters)
Turkish soldiers stand guard as rescuers work at the crash of a Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 airplane. (AFP)
Turkish soldiers stand guard as rescuers work at the crash of a Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 airplane. (AFP)
A picture shows the crash site of a Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 airplane, after it skidded off the runway upon landing at Sabiha Gokcen airport in Istanbul on Feb. 5, 2020. (AFP)
A picture shows the crash site of a Pegasus Airlines Boeing 737 airplane, after it skidded off the runway upon landing at Sabiha Gokcen airport in Istanbul on Feb. 5, 2020. (AFP)
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06 Feb 2020 03:02:59 GMT9
06 Feb 2020 03:02:59 GMT9
  • The plane split into three pieces after ‘a rough landing’
  • It was carrying 177 passengers and six crew members from Turkey’s western province of Izmir

ISTANBUL: Flights resumed Thursday at an Istanbul airport after a Turkish airliner skidded off a runway, killing three people and injuring 180 others.

Sabiha Gokcen Airport restarted operations at around 4a.m. (0100 GMT) though delays and cancelations continued.

On Wednesday evening, a Boeing 737 operated by low-cost Pegasus Airline landed from Izmir on Turkey’s western coast during strong winds and heavy rain and overshot the runway. It skidded about 50 to 60 meters before it dropped into the ditch from a height of about 30 meters, according to the city’s governor, Ali Yerlikaya.

The plane, carrying 177 passengers and six crew members, broke up into three parts upon impact. The plane was 11 years old, according to flight tracking website Flightradar24.

Yerlikaya, speaking early Thursday, said all those injured were stable and four people had significant injuries, but he didn’t give details on how severe they were.

The passengers included 22 people from 12 countries.

Pegasus Airlines changed its logo on Twitter to a blackened version in a sign of mourning, and said its “priority is to support the relatives and friends who have lost loved ones.” The company is majority-owned by Turkish billionaire Sevket Sabanci and his family, with 34.5 percent of shares floating in stock exchange Borsa Istanbul. Its fleet of 83 planes fly to more than 100 destinations.

Police guarded the wreckage Thursday morning.

Another Pegasus Airlines plane skidded off the runway at the same airport in Istanbul on Jan. 7, causing the temporary closure of the airport. There were no injuries.

In January 2018, another Boeing 737 in the Pegasus fleet slid off a runway at Trabzon Airport in northeastern Turkey. The plane came to rest in the dirt above the Black Sea with its nose pointed toward the water. No one was injured.

AP

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