Plane crash at Schiphol, Amsterdam
#1

Quote:
Originally Posted by CNN
A passenger jet carrying more than 130 people crashed into a field as it was coming into land in Amsterdam Wednesday. The Turkish Airlines Boeing 737-800 broke into three pieces on impact, but fatalities were initially thought to be minimal.

There were conflicting reports about whether anyone was killed on the plane, which had 127 passengers and seven crew members.

The airline spokesman and Turkish Transportation Minister Binali Yildirim said no one had died, but an airline official told CNN sister station CNN-Turk that at least one person was confirmed dead.

A news photographer at the scene said he saw an unknown number of bodies lying under a white blanket, said Maaike Voersma, a journalist with Dutch newspaper De Bers told CNN. Twenty people were injured, the airline spokesman said.

A passenger on the plane who spoke to Turkish network DHA said he saw injured people trapped and squeezed between the seats when he walked off the plane.

Journalist Ivan Watson in Istanbul said Turkish media quoted one crash survivor as saying that the back of the plane hit the ground first. "He said it was not an extremely horrible situation, it was like being in turbulence. He said it was more like a sudden impact, then we stopped." Video Watch reports on Turkish plane crash »

The Boeing 737-800, which originated from Istanbul, Turkey, was trying to land at Schiphol International Airport when it went down at about 10:40 a.m. local time, Dutch airport officials said.

Pictures from the scene showed the plane broken in three pieces. One tear was in front of the wing, splitting the "Turkish" logo in two, and a larger tear was farther back along he fuselage. See where the plane crashed »

Most of the injured were seated toward the back of the plane, which sustained the most damage, a passenger on the plane told Turkish station NTV. Many of the passengers simply walked off the plane through the cracks in the fuselage, witnesses told NTV.

Images from the scene showed medics treating passengers on the ground next to the buckled hulk of the plane, while firefighters and police examined the aircraft.

Emergency exits were wide open and there was no signs of fire damage to the fuselage. Also visible was one of the aircraft's engines, apparently separated from the shattered remains of one of the wings.

The plane landed in a flat farmer's field near the airport, RTL journalist Greg Crouch told CNN. He said the weather at the time was partly sunny with no wind or rain.

A bank manager who was a passenger on the plane told NTV that there were no emergency announcements. The crew's last word to the cabin was an announcement to fasten seatbelts and prepare for landing, the bank manager said.

He said he felt the pilot giving more power to the engines before a sudden drop and then the crash. He described the crash as similar to a sudden impact that was over in a matter of seconds.

Kieran Daly, of Air Transport Intelligence said the impact had been severe but it could have been survivable because of the lack of fire. He added that there had been vast improvements in the materials used to build airplanes, meaning they did not burn as easily.

Daly also said that the Boeing 737-800 is a reliable aircraft that has been successful and safe in service.

"They really are pretty much state-of-the-art airlines with every imaginable technical benefit the industry has come up with over the years," Daly told CNN.

"You would be optimistic that they would be quite survivable in an accident." Daly said the Turkish aviation industry has a "pretty good record" of safety, and that Turkish Airlines, the national carrier, has a "very good record."

The airline's last accident was of a small commuter jet in 2003, he said. It was a fatal crash that happened at a remote airfield in eastern Turkey, he said. "Their mainline operation is safe," Daly said. "Their pilots are well thought of."

The last accident at Schiphol Airport happened in December 2003 when an EasyJet flight carrying 103 passengers to London collided on takeoff with a lamppost during icy conditions, according to Aviation Safety Network's Web site. The crash caused significant damage to the aircraft, but no one was killed.

The other two most recent accidents at Schiphol -- in 1998 and 1997 -- also resulted in no fatalities, according to the network.

The last fatal incident at the Amsterdam airport happened in April 1994 when a KLM aircraft crashed shortly after takeoff as it tried to return to Schiphol. Three of the 24 passengers and crew members on board were killed
the latest news says 9 confirmed dead and more than 50 injured
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#2


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#3

This is very sad. I live in The Netherlands myself, although I live about 130 km's away from Amsterdam.
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#4

i saw this on the news, lots of planes going down recently..
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#5

God is testing his snowing filterscript, but he used airplane objects... (black joke )

Altho this is very sad, 9 deaths... even if they are few... 9 deaths destroy 9 families... and lots of friends... sad indeed... May them rest in peace...

im goin to try to make an Anti Plane crash FS to set their pos on land if crash starts
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#6

continuing in this morbid sa-mp humour: this would've probably never happened if they hadn't used that fuel filterscript


that's enough sarcasm for the day, this really is a tragic event
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#7

I don't find any of this funny at all, although the plane looks like an Ulster bus with wings.

[img width=1024 height=768]http://scottmackey.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/translink-0205-18.JPG[/img]
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#8

Quote:
Originally Posted by Norn
I don't find any of this funny at all, although the plane looks like an Ulster bus with wings.

[bus goes here]
the plane reminds me of a boeing 737
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#9

I live near there, and my friend lives in that village were it happened. (Zwanenburg)
It's hard to get to his house now, all roads are closed.

EDIT: He just saw someone with a skinless face.
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#10

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sproutric
EDIT: He just saw someone with a skinless face.
o.O, that's odd. I haven't seen that before, though it's perfectly possible as the crash was quite tremendic.
Anyway, R.I.P. To the people that have sadly died...
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