A Boeing 777 jetliner crashed at San Francisco International Airport on
Saturday after a flight across the Pacific Ocean from South Korea. There
was no immediate information about casualties.
The plane, Asiana
Airlines Flight 214 from Seoul, came to rest beside the airport's
Runway 28 — missing its tail, spewing black smoke and with most of the
top of the fuselage ripped off.
Video footage showed passengers sliding down the emergency chutes. The airport suspended all flights.
Stefanie
Turner, a witness, told MSNBC that she saw the plane come in with the
tail in an unusually low position, then saw it cartwheel down the
runway.
"The tail was too low. Instead of coming in flat it was
coming in at a 45-degree angle, with the tail far too low," she said.
"It really went through quite a few acrobatics on the runway."
David
Eun, who was on the flight, posted to his Twitter account: "I just
crash landed at SFO. Tail ripped off. Most everyone seems fine. I'm ok."
A source close to the early investigation told NBC News that the pilot did not make a distress call before landing.
Aerial
footage also showed emergency teams and lines of vehicles surrounding a
damaged wing and the shredded tail section. Fire crews stationed on the
tarmac sprayed white foam retardant.
It appeared to be the first
crash of a jumbo jet in the United States since November 2001, when
American Airlines Flight 587 crashed in a New York neighborhood.
Federal
sources told NBC News that there was no indication of terrorism. The
National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a full team to
San Francisco. Boeing said it was gathering information.
"Our
thoughts are with everyone affected by today's incident at SFO," Boeing
said on its Twitter account. "We stand ready to assist the NTSB."
Crews douse flames on crashed Boeing 777 plane
Crews douse flames on crashed Boeing 777 plane
추락 한 보잉 777 비행기 승무원 끄기를 화염
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