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Investigation begins into 'Miracle on the Hudson'
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-01-17 08:19

 

Passengers are rescued from the stricken US Airways plane that crashed into the Hudson River in New York on Thursday. Reuters

NEW YORK: Everything about the fate of US Airways Flight 1549 seemed like a million-to-one shot - a flock of birds crossing a jetliner's path and taking out both engines, a safe landing in the Hudson River.

It was a chain of improbability. Birds tangle with airplanes regularly but rarely bring down commercial aircraft. Jet engines sometimes fail - but both at once? Pilots train for a range of emergencies, but few, if any, have ever successfully ditched a jet in one of the nation's busiest waterways without any life-threatening injuries.

No wonder New York Governor David Paterson called it "a miracle on the Hudson".

As amazement turned to questions, a team of 20 National Transportation Safety Board investigators began looking into how Thursday's bizarre near-disaster happened.

US Airways Chief Executive Doug Parker said in a statement it was "premature to speculate about the cause". Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said there was no immediate indication the incident was "anything other than an accident".

If the accident was hard to imagine, so was the result: a cool-headed pilot maneuvering his hobbled jetliner over New York City and landing it in the river with an impact one passenger described as little worse than a rear-end collision. Besides one victim with two broken legs, there were no other reports of serious injuries to the 155 people aboard.

"You're happy to be alive, really," 23-year-old passenger Bill Zuhoski said.

The US Airways Airbus A320, bound for Charlotte, North Carolina, took off from LaGuardia Airport at 3:26 pm. Less than a minute later, the pilot reported a "double bird strike" and said he needed to return to LaGuardia, said Doug Church, a spokesman for the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.

Church said the controller told the pilot to divert to an airport in nearby Teterboro, New Jersey. It was not clear why the pilot, identified as Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger III of Danville, California, did not land there and headed for the Hudson instead.

Passengers quickly realized something was terrifyingly wrong.

"I heard an explosion, and I saw flames coming from the left wing, and I thought, 'This isn't good'," said Dave Sanderson, 47, who was heading home to Charlotte from a business trip. "Then it was just controlled chaos. People started running up the aisle. People were getting shoved out of the way."

Then came an ominous warning from the captain: "Brace for impact because we're going down," according to passenger Jeff Kolodjay, 31.

Some passengers prayed. Vallie Collins, 37, tapped out a text message to her husband, Steve: "My plane is crashing." For a desperate half-hour, he was unable to get in touch with her to learn that she had survived.

Onshore, from streets and office windows, witnesses watched the plane steadily descend off roughly 48th Street in midtown Manhattan.

"I just thought, 'Why is it so low?' And, splash, it hit the water," said Barbara Sambriski, a researcher at The Associated Press, who watched the water landing from the news organization's high-rise office.

The 150 passengers and five crew members were forced to escape as the plane quickly became submerged up to its windows in cold water. Dozens stood on the aircraft's wings, as commuter ferries and Coast Guard vessels converged to rescue them.

One ferry arrived within minutes. Riders grabbed life vests and rope and tossed them to plane passengers in the water.

"They were cheering when we pulled up," said Captain Vincent Lombardi. "People were panicking. They said, 'Hurry up! Hurry up'!"

Two police scuba divers said they pulled a woman from a lifeboat "frightened out of her mind" and lethargic from hypothermia. Helen Rodriguez, a paramedic who was among the first to arrive at the scene, said she saw one woman with two broken legs.

Paramedics treated at least 78 patients, many for hypothermia, bruises and other minor injuries, fire officials said. Some of the shivering survivors were swaddled in blankets.

The plane initially remained afloat but sank slowly as it drifted downriver. Gradually, only about half of the tail fin and rudder were above water. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the aircraft finally wound up near Battery Park, at the lower tip of Manhattan and about four miles from where the pilot ditched it.

From 1990 to 2007, there were nearly 80,000 reported incidents of birds striking nonmilitary aircraft, about one strike for every 10,000 flights, according to the Federal Aviation Administration and the Department of Agriculture.

Agencies

(China Daily 01/17/2009 page1)