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Flights resume at Dubai Airport after plane crash-lands

An Emirates airliner with 300 people on board crash-landed and caught fire in Dubai on Wednesday, killing a firefighter and causing a four-hour shutdown at one of the world's busiest airports.

Ahmed Ramzan, Gulf News Dubai, AFP | The Boeing 777 of the UAE airliner Emirates after it caught fire following a crash-landing at Dubai Airport on August 3, 2016.
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All 300 passengers on board the plane coming from India were evacuated safely, Dubai authorities have said, as footage on social media showed smoke billowing from the aircraft after it crash-landed.

But the director general of the General Civil Aviation Authority, Saif al-Suwaidi, said in a statement that "one of the firefighters lost his life while saving the lives of the others".

The exact circumstances of the accident involving a Boeing 777 were not immediately clear.

Video purportedly showed a tower of flame bursting from the front of the jetliner, and then a thick black plume of smoke rising into the sky.

Photographs on social media showed a plane lying crumpled on the tarmac with black smoke pouring from its upper section.

A spokesperson for operator Dubai Airports said everyone aboard flight EK521 coming from Thiruvananthapuram had been evacuated and emergency services were managing the situation.

A man waiting for relatives on the flight said he had spoken to them by phone. "They said they're safe and alright, but that they felt a great panic as the plane was on fire."

Another man said his family had also told him they were OK and there had been a problem with the landing gear.

"It was actually really terrifying. As we were landing there was smoke coming out in the cabin," passenger Sharon Maryam Sharji said. "People were screaming and we had a very hard landing. We left by going down the emergency slides and as we were leaving on the runway we could see the whole plane catch fire. It was horrifying."

Solid safety record

According to air traffic control recordings cited by Aviation Herald, a respected independent website monitoring air accidents, controllers at Dubai reminded the crew of the Boeing 777 to lower the landing gear as it came into approach.

Shortly afterwards, the crew announced they were aborting the landing to "go around", a routine procedure for which pilots are well-trained. But the aircraft came to rest near the end of the runway instead, Aviation Herald reported.

It was not clear whether the landing gear was extended when the aircraft touched the ground at 8:45 GMT. A family of passengers who declined to be named said the equipment did not deploy and the jet landed on its belly.

Both the airline and aircraft have a solid safety record. It is the first time an aircraft operated by Emirates appears to have been damaged beyond repair since it was founded in the 1980s and is only its third serious safety incident.

The crash is a blow to the Dubai carrier weeks after it was voted the world's top airline by Skytrax at the Farnborough Airshow, taking the crown from Gulf rival Qatar Airways.

Emirates carried 51.3 million passengers in 2015 and is the world's fourth largest carrier in terms of passenger numbers adjusted for the length of each trip.

It has a fleet of over 250 aircraft, including the world's largest fleet of Airbus A380 and Boeing 777 jets, and uses its Dubai hub to link the United States or Europe to Asia.

'Wind shear'

Airline chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed al-Maktoum said in a statement the flight had been involved in an "incident".

"We do not have all the information but thankfully there were no fatalities among our passengers and crew," he said.

Sheikh Ahmed later told reporters that 13 people on board were hospitalised, most of them for minor injuries.

Planemaker Boeing said in a statement it was monitoring the situation in Dubai and it would be working with Emirates to gather more information.

Safety experts said it was too early to pinpoint any cause for the crash. Investigators will scour the wreckage and interview pilots, controllers and witnesses for clues to any technical malfunctions, human error or weather-related problems.

Judging by footage of the aircraft's intact tail section, where the "black box" flight recorders are located, vital voice and data recordings should be available for investigators.

Online weather reports before the crash reported Dubai was relatively windy, with dust blowing and "wind shear" reported on all runways.

Wind shear is a potentially hazardous condition involving sudden and unpredictable changes in wind direction or speed.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP, REUTERS)

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