Passengers trapped upside down as plane catches fire in typhoon
A China Airlines jet crash-landed at Chek Lap Kok and overturned in flames last night, killing two passengers and injuring 211 others on board.
The plane, landing during a No 8 signal hoisted for Typhoon Sam, touched down on fire after the right wing clipped the runway and was torn off.
Flight CI642, from Bangkok, had 300 passengers and 15 crew on board when it came in at 6.48pm during fierce winds and heavy rain.
'I saw the plane like a fireball coming down,' said Toshi Hoshino, a passenger on another flight who was changing planes at the time.
'The right wing crashed into the ground and dragged on for a while before a big fireball shot up three storeys high.' Witnesses and the co-pilot said the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 was flying at a 15-degree angle and was on fire as it approached the southern runway. Officials said the approach was normal.
Passenger David MacDonnell said: 'About 100 metres from the runway, people at the back started clapping and I thought it was the kiss of death; it was.' More than two hours after impact there were still about 100 people on board, many strapped upside-down in their seats, as rescue crews helped by medical teams from Princess Margaret Hospital worked in driving rain to evacuate the plane.