Tuesday, June 16, 2026
FB X LI YT
Breaking
Kayode Oloko: The Steady Hand Behind Think Yoruba First Dangote Refinery Slashes Petrol Gantry Price to N1,175 Per Litre IllBliss: A Tenant Who Mistook Rent for Ownership – Lagos Will Never Be Yours “We Are Coming to Rob and Kidnap You All” – Chilling Notice Terrorises Mowe Residents Enugu NDC in Turmoil as Aspirants Allege N1 Billion Extortion, Pass Vote of No Confidence on Nwodo Ex-Ambassador Bode Sunmonu to Lead Olokola Free Trade Zone Technical Committee as Ondo Pushes Industrial Revolution Ondo State Set for Industrial Revolution as Dangote Unveils Nigeria’s Biggest Industrial Free Trade Zone UPDATE 🇳🇬🛥️💰: Billionaire Abdul Samad Rabiu Hosts Billionaire Femi Otedola and Friends on Luxury Yacht in Monaco Gathering
NEWS

Japan Plane Catches Fire at Tokyo Airport

January 2, 2024 2 min read

A Japan Airlines plane was in flames on the runway of Tokyo’s Haneda Airport on Tuesday after apparently colliding with a coast guard aircraft, television reports said.

The images on broadcaster NHK showed the plane moving along the runway before an explosion of orange flames burst from beneath and behind it.

All 367 passengers on board the Airbus plane were evacuated, broadcaster NHK reported.

The cause of the incident was not immediately clear, but television reports said that the Airbus collided with a Coast Guard aircraft.

Reports said that the plane had just arrived from Sapporo airport on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.

A Coast Guard official at Haneda Airport, one of the world’s busiest, said they were “checking details”.

“It’s not clear if there was a collision. But it is certain that our plane is involved,” he told AFP.

The television footage showed flames coming out of windows and the plane’s nose on the ground as rescue workers sprayed it.

There was also burning debris on the runway.

More than 70 fire engines were being deployed, NHK reported.

Japan has not suffered a serious commercial aviation accident in decades.

Its worst ever was in 1985, when a JAL jumbo jet flying from Tokyo to Osaka crashed in the central Gunma region, killing 520 passengers and crew.

That disaster was one of the world’s deadliest plane crashes involving a single flight.

AFP