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Airbus Crashes In New York River

Issue 364
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News Headlines

UN Votes For Somalia Peace Force

“The British Government's Position Has Always Been To Be Sympathetic To Somaliland's Demand For Independence” Lord Malloch-Brown  

Court Rules Somali Ex-Government Official Can Be Sued In U.S. Courts For Violations Of Human Rights

Somalia And Somaliland Raised At Foreign Office Questions

Egyptian Teacher Kidnapped In Burao Released

Somali Politian Executed For 'Apostasy'

Local and Regional Affairs

Maternal Mortality In Somaliland In Decline But Still Worrying

Somaliland: A New Company To Provide Gas

Somaliland: Admas University College Opens A New Campus

Last Ethiopian Troops Leave Somalia's Capital

UN Orders Eritrea To Withdraw From Disputed Djibouti Border

Thousands Cheer Ethiopia Pull-Out

Insurgents Attack Somali Presidential Palace

Somaliland: Voter Registration Successfully Completed

Inside A Pirate Network

Somaliland: U.S. Investor Believes Ethiopia Likely To Break Apart Soon
Somali Pirate's Body Washes Ashore With $153,000
Editorial

Egypt And Piracy

Somaliland Voter Registration: What Is Next?

Features & Commentry

Miss East Africa UK 2008: Contestant Marian Fahen Samatar From Somalia

What A Black President Means To Me
Charity Worker Preparing To Visit War-Torn Sierra Leone

An Open Letter to Martin Luther King

Laying Our Hands On The Problem

By Flying Car From London To Timbuktu

Stop Babysitting Bottomless Somalia

To Reduce Piracy At Sea, Help Somalia On Land
Security Council Expresses Intention To Establish Peacekeeping Mission In Somalia, Subject To Further Decision By 1 June, Unanimously Adopting Resolution 1863

International News

 

History Links King Holiday, Obama Inauguration

Three Million Hit By Windows Worm

Airbus Crashes In New York River

Man Refuses To Drive 'No God' Bus

U.S. Navy Nears Deal with Unidentified Country to Prosecute Somali Pirates

How Birds Can Bring Down A Plane

Opinion

Government Failed To Stop School Children From Chewing Khat

Puntland Parliament Appoints New Pirate President

An Awakening For Somaliland Citizens: Somaliland Voter Registration

Indonesian Troops For Gaza?

Somalia: Talibanistan In East Africa

The Global Crisis Of Capitalism And Its Impact

Passengers are rescued from the plane's wings
New York, January 16, 2009 – A US airliner on a domestic flight with 155 people aboard has ditched into the Hudson River in New York City but with no loss of life.
All 150 passengers, three flight attendants and two pilots were rescued in freezing weather, with a number later treated for unspecified injuries.
The US Airways Airbus A320 crashed just after taking off from LaGuardia Airport heading for Charlotte, North Carolina.
Officials believe the plane may have collided with a flock of geese.
Rescue boats plucked passengers, who could be seen wearing life jackets, from the wings of the plane.
The BBC's Greg Wood, in New York, says the aircraft was drifting rapidly down the Hudson as the rescue was carried out.
Our correspondent says there is a mood of overwhelming relief in New York that there was no loss of life.
US Airways gave an emergency number for people who believe they may have had relatives on the flight: 1-800-679-8215.
'Like on a runway'
Flight 1549 departed LaGuardia at 1503 local time (2003 GMT), after a delay of 18 minutes, the airline said.
According to an air controllers union spokesman, a US Airways pilot reported a "double bird strike" less than a minute after take-off and asked to return to the ground, before ditching in the Hudson.
The spokesman, Doug Church, said the pilot apparently meant that birds had hit both of the plane's jet engines. It appears the birds involved were a flock of geese.
Stephanie Nachman, who works in a high-rise building in Times Square, told the BBC she had seen the plane crash.
She said she had seen the plane flying very low over the Hudson and was shocked by how low.
Then it landed in the water, she added, but "it wasn't wild or erratic but if as it was landing on a runway".
Within minutes, she added, people got out, doors popped out and rafts unfurled.
Jeff Kolodjay, a passenger on the plane, described the crash for the BBC.
"About three or four minutes into the flight... the left engine just blew... flames coming out of it and I was looking right at it cos I was sitting right there.
"And it just started smelling a lot like gasoline and a couple of minutes after that the pilot said 'you guys gotta brace for a hard impact'.
"And that's when everyone started, to be honest, saying prayers and we looked over the water and we thought we had a chance because, you know, there's some water.
Asked how he got out of the plane he said: "At first chaos, but everyone was kind of orderly, man. You know after a while everyone, we just, I just kept saying relax relax, women and children first. And then it just started filling with water, quick."
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said that police divers had rescued some people from the water.
A spokesman at St Luke's Roosevelt hospital in Manhattan told Reuters that he expected as many as 50 patients with exposure and secondary injuries, while people with more serious injuries were being sent to nearby hospitals.
'Truly heroic'
New York Senator Charles Schumer said it was a modern-day miracle that no one had been killed.
"The pilot was truly heroic - that's the preliminary indication," he said.
"He saw what was happening, gained a low altitude, turned the plane in the right direction, found the Hudson River and made sure it wasn't a nose-first landing but rather flat.
"And that's probably what saved everybody's life, thank God."
"Gotta give it to the pilot, man, he made a hell of a landing," said passenger Jeff Kolodjay.
America's National Transportation Safety Board has announced it is is sending a team to investigate the crash.
Source: BBC
 



 


 











 




 




 



 


 

 


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