Stair car crashes into Airbus plane at
Ho Chi Minh City
airport
A Jetstar Pacific
airplane is seen at Tan Son Nhat International Airport
in Ho Chi Minh City. Tuoi Tre
A stair car on
Friday ran into the wing of a plane operated by Jetstar Pacific, in the
latest collision between a ground service vehicle and an aircraft in Vietnam.
The Jetstar
Pacific flight BL570 was about to taxi at Tan
Son Nhat
International Airport
in Ho Chi Minh City
this morning when the stair car hit its left wing and damaged its tip.
The flight bound
for the Central Highlands city of Buon
Ma Thuot at 6:55 am was thus delayed and passengers
had to leave the aircraft to wait for its repairs.
A Jetstar Pacific
representative confirmed that the ground service vehicle is also under its
management, adding the wing of the Airbus plane was only slightly damaged.
The airline
asserted that the accident was not serious and it took only two to three
hours to fix the components with support from the French planemaker’s
technical team.
Jetstar Pacific
CEO Le Hong Ha said the flight was expected to depart at 9:30 am the same
day.
The Friday
incident is the second crash between a ground service vehicle and an airplane
at Tan Son Nhat in a fortnight.
On August 27, a
China Airlines flight bound for Taipei
was canceled after an aircraft belt loader collided with the
plane shortly prior to takeoff.
The belt loader, a
truck that carries a belt from which luggage is loaded onto aircraft, crashed
into the door of the Airbus A330’s cargo bay and tore it off.
The vehicle was
operated by the Tan Son Nhat International Airport Ground Service Co. and
driven by Truong Van Toan, who later admitted he mistook the accelerator for
the brake when approaching the aircraft to load luggage, which led to the
crash.
On August 7, a
similar incident occurred at Da Nang
International Airport,
where a private plane bringing passengers from Hong Kong
to the central Vietnamese city had one of its wings ripped off in
a collision with an airport cargo cart.
The CL350 aircraft
was sitting on the tarmac awaiting passengers for the return flight to Hong Kong when a baggage truck crashed into its left
wing.
The aircraft was
pushed to the left for about 20cm after the collision, whereas its left wing
was left with a 30cm-long mark.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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