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Three Dead After Boeing Jet Splits Open on Landing in Turkey

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Three Dead After Boeing Jet Splits Open on Landing in Turkey

  • Boeing 737-800 veered off runway in wet weather in Istanbul
  • Front portion of aircraft broke apart from main fuselage
Watch: Emergency workers examine the wreckage of Pegasus Airline’s Boeing 737-800 jet.

At least three people were killed when a Turkish jetliner broke apart after landing in wet weather in Istanbul.

All 180 other people on board were injured when the Boeing Co. 737-800 operated by Pegasus Airlines veered off the runway at Sabiha Gokcen airport on Wednesday, Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said. Video footage showed passengers fleeing through gaps in the fuselage. The rear of the jet caught fire, while the front detached and came to rest upside down.

Sabiha Gokcen airport, located on the Asian side of Istanbul, was closed following the incident but resumed flights early Thursday, authorities said.

The single-aisle jet had flown from Izmir on Turkey’s Aegean coast, authorities said. It appeared to have plowed down a slope from the runway and stopped short of a busy road, one of the main highways going into the city, based on photos of the aircraft. The plane was traveling at 117 kilometers an hour (72 miles an hour) near the end of the runway, according to Flightradar24.

Turkey: Plane skids off runway at airport in Istanbul

The wreckage of the Pegasus Airlines Boeing Co. 737-800 at Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen International Airport, on Feb. 6.

Photographer: Onur Coban/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

All Pegasus aircraft have “high technical reliability” and are young jets with an average age of 5.3 years, CEO Mehmet Nane said at a press conference in Istanbul on Thursday. Visibly shaken and speaking with a trembling voice, Nane said he acknowledges journalists have “many questions,” but then ended the press conference without taking any.

A Pegasus spokeswoman confirmed that the narrow-body was a Boeing plane, part of a fleet that includes Airbus SE A320 aircraft.

The 737-800 model, which has a good safety record, predates the 737 Max version that has been grounded worldwide since March after two fatal crashes.

“We continue to receive reports out of Istanbul, Turkey, regarding the accident involving Pegasus Airlines,” Boeing said in a statement. “Our top concern right now is for the safety and well-being of the passengers and crew onboard. We are in contact with our airline customer and have offered them our support. We stand ready to assist in any way possible.”

The accident wasn’t the first such incident for Pegasus. Last month, one of the airline’s 737-800s ran off the edge of a runway at the same airport after landing in bad weather, resulting in no injuries.

In January 2018, a Pegasus jet carrying 168 people slid off a runway at Turkey’s Trabzon Airport. There were no injuries reported, but one of the engines fell into the Black Sea as the Boeing aircraft slid down an embankment.

Pegasus dropped as much as 6.6% at Thursday’s open in Borsa Istanbul, its biggest decline in three weeks. The airline was trading down 4.1% at 71.7 liras as of 1:31 p.m. in Istanbul.

— With assistance by Rick Clough, and Selcan Hacaoglu

(Updates with CEO comments in fifth, stock move in final paragraph.)