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US air safety body says no passengers were seated near 737 MAX 9 fuselage that failed, grounding plane

  • The head of the US’ NTSB said no passengers were seated next to a cabin panel that blew out on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9
  • The two seats next to the portion of fuselage affected were unoccupied but parts of a seat nearby, including the head rest, were missing

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NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy said “we are very, very fortunate here that this did not end up in something more tragic” and praised the FAA for swiftly grounding the MAX 9. Photo: AP

The head of the United States National Transportation Safety Board said no passengers were seated next to a cabin panel that blew out on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9, forcing an emergency landing on Friday in a potentially “tragic” incident.

NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told a press conference late on Saturday the two seats next to the portion of fuselage that blew out were unoccupied.

“We are very, very fortunate here that this did not end up in something more tragic,” Homendy said. Parts of the seat next to the fuselage, including the head rest, were missing.

The Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 that made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport after a part of the fuselage broke off mid-flight on Friday is parked at a maintenance hanger in Portland, Oregon, on Saturday. Photo: AP
The Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 that made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport after a part of the fuselage broke off mid-flight on Friday is parked at a maintenance hanger in Portland, Oregon, on Saturday. Photo: AP

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Saturday grounded 171 Boeing 737 MAX 9 jetliners for safety checks after the emergency landing of the plane, which had been in service for just eight weeks.

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A piece of fuselage tore off the left side of the jet as it climbed after take-off from Portland, Oregon, en route to Ontario, California, forcing pilots to turn back and land safely with all 171 passengers and six crew on board. Some minor injuries were reported, Homendy said.

The FAA did not rule out further action as a probe began into the potential structural failure that left a rectangular hole in an area of fuselage reserved for an optional extra door but which is plugged and deactivated on Alaska Air’s aircraft.

The damaged part of the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9, Flight 1282, which was forced to return to Portland International Airport on Friday. Photo: AP
The damaged part of the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9, Flight 1282, which was forced to return to Portland International Airport on Friday. Photo: AP

Investigators will look at maintenance records, the pressurisation system and the door components. Homendy said. “We’ll go where the investigation takes us,” she said, asking for the public’s help in recovering the missing door plug, believed to be in a suburb west of Portland.

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