Today: 5 July 2025
2 January 2024
2 mins read

Air Tragedy Strikes Haneda

Television footage showed a large burst of fire erupting from the side of the JAL plane as it taxied on a runway. The area around the wing then caught fire…reports Asian Lite News

More than 300 flights were cancelled after a Japan Airlines (JAL) Airbus A350 carrying 379 people collided with a second plane while landing at Tokyo’s Haneda airport.

The Tuesday evening incident forced the airport to shut down all runways for several hours late into the night, leading to cancellations of 226 flights to and from Haneda, affecting over 40,000 passengers, reports Xinhua news agency.

Despite the reopening of three runways on Wednesday, about 100 flights are still expected to be scrubbed on the day, disrupting the travel plans of 19,000 passengers.

At around 6 p.m.on Tuesday, JAL Flight 516, that had flown into the Tokyo from New Chitose Airport in Hokkaido prefecture was landing on Haneda’s C-runway when the Coast Guard flight MA-722, a Bombardier Dash-8, collided with it, with both aircraft catching fire.

Television footage showed a large burst of fire erupting from the side of the JAL plane as it taxied on a runway. The area around the wing then caught fire.

The footage seen an hour later showed the blaze engulfed the aircraft.

Five of the six crew members aboard the MA-722 were confirmed dead, while the captain who managed to escape earlier was severely injured.

The Coast Guard plane, which belongs to the Haneda Airport base, was taxiing on the runway to transport relief goods for quake-hit areas in Niigata prefecture after a series of temblors of up to 7.6 magnitude struck central Japan on Monday afternoon, according to Coast Guard spokesperson Yoshinori Yanagishima.

Meanwhile, all 367 passengers and 12 crew members on board the JAL flight escaped from the airplane while it was on fire without life-threatening injuries after the collision.

The Tokyo Fire Department said it took more than eight hours to extinguish the fire following the crash.

A Haneda air traffic controller had permitted the passenger plane to land on a runway before the crash took place, and had ordered the Coast Guard aircraft to “hold short of the runway”, national broadcaster NHK reported, citing sources with the Transport Ministry.

The Japan Transport Safety Board, the government-affiliated agency in charge of probing serious accidents involving airplanes, trains and ships, on Wednesday started investigating the cause of the accident and examining the aircraft wreckage.

ALSO READ-Dozens of Chinese Warplanes Spotted around Taiwan

Previous Story

Death Toll Rises to 64 in Japan Earthquake Series

Next Story

Trump Takes Legal Action Over Maine Ballot Disqualification

Latest from -Top News

G42 AI tool boosts procurement by 40%

Abu Dhabi’s tech giant leads the charge in AI-driven operational transformation with (In)Business Procurement platform. Abu Dhabi-based global technology powerhouse G42 has taken a major leap in enterprise digital transformation with the

ADX, banks launch region’s first digital bond

Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) has launched the pricing phase for the region’s first distributed ledger technology (DLT)-based bond, setting a new benchmark in financial innovation and blockchain integration. The bond, issued

Saudi, Indonesia seal $27bn in deals

Saudi Arabia and Indonesia deepen ties with $27bn in agreements, boosting trade, energy, defence and pilgrimage cooperation, signalling a new chapter in strategic partnership. Saudi Arabia and Indonesia inked a raft of

UN urges investments in Syria

Rebuilding Syria requires not only emergency relief but sustained investment in basic services, economic recovery, and stability, says UN Office in Syria. A high-level United Nations delegation has called for increased international

Saudi deploys first THAAD missile unit

Riyadh boosts its long-range missile defence with U.S.-made THAAD system, amid growing regional missile threats. Saudi Arabia has officially activated its first Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) missile unit, marking a
Go toTop