Minor Accident Involving Two Planes at Heathrow Airport
Filed in archive Aviation Travel by Terah Shelton on October 16, 2007

On Monday night, two passenger airlines snipped each other on the runway at London's Heathrow Airport. The accident involved British Airways and Sri Lankan Airlines. Specific details about the accident were not released, but passengers said the wing of their plane hit the other one. There were no injuries.
"It was a minor collision in between two planes who just clipped each other," a London fire brigade spokesman said, speaking anonymously in line with the brigade's policy. "There was no fire, no injuries, no damage."
The planes involved were a British Airways Boeing 747 and a Sri Lankan Airlines Airbus A340, the fire brigade said.
Authorities didn't provide specific details of the accident, but a passenger aboard the Sri Lankan flight said the wing of her plane appeared to hit the other aircraft.
"We turned our wing, almost hit what looked like the tail end of the British Airways flight, and we ended up chopping off a bit of wing," Danish journalist Annasofie Flamand told The Associated Press by telephone.
Passengers on both planes were evacuated safely after the collision at 10:10 p.m., BAA PLC, which manages Heathrow, said in a statement. Officials did not say how many passengers had been aboard the two aircraft
British Airways said an investigation had been launched, and that the airline's plane was being examined by engineers.
The fire brigade disputed an earlier Sky News television report stating that one of the plane's engines had fallen off, insisting there had been no damage.
The television station reported that some 40 fire engines arrived at the scene, but the fire brigade said the engines left the runway after about 15 minutes.
Permalink: Minor Accident Involving Two Planes at Heathrow Airport
Tags:
London Heathrow Airport Sri Lankan Airlines British Airways Aviation Weblog aviation heathrow+airpor
Trackback: http://www.creative-weblogging.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.pl/97192


















