Friday, August 12, 2011

Tobago: A.N.R. Robinson International Airport reopens after Virgin Atlantic plane mishap.

SCARBOROUGH, Tobago, Friday August 12, 2011 – The ANR Robinson International Airport in Tobago has been reopened following a closure triggered by a Virgin Atlantic plane mishap on the runway last night.

Operations resumed around 6 o’clock this morning.

None of the 452 passengers and 16 crew members on board the flight, VS 52, was hurt in the accident which occurred around 7:25 pm when the Boeing 747-400, which was about to depart for Gatwick, London, entered a section of the airport that was undergoing repairs and closed for construction. The plane was immobilized as a result.

“The Airports Authority of Trinidad and Tobago (AATT) immediately activated its emergency plan. The Fire Service responded and all relevant stakeholders were alerted,” a statement from the government said. “AATT organized the shuttling of passengers from the aircraft to the terminal.”

The area of the runway had been closed to facilitate paving and rehabilitation works and the statement said the closed taxiway was appropriately marked and lit.

A team from the Trinidad and Tobago Civil Aviation Authority is conducting investigations to determine the cause of the incident.

Four Caribbean Airlines flights were cancelled as a result of the closure of the airport.

The Ministry of Transport said contingency plans were in place to accommodate passengers who were displaced as a result of the incident.

Last night's incident was the second aviation mishap in the Caribbean in two weeks, following a Caribbean Airlines plane crash at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport in Guyana on July 30.

In that incident, there were no fatalities but some injuries, a few of them serious, when the plane carrying 163 passengers and crew overshot the runway, broke through the airport perimeter fence and split in two.

Source:  http://www.caribbean360.com

THE ANR Robinson International Airport in Tobago was shut down last night after a Virgin Atlantic plane entered a closed-off section of the runway and blew a tyre which left the aircraft disabled.

In a press release last night, the Ministry of Transport announced that the airport has been closed until further notice.

The release stated:

"As at 8 p.m. tonight, A Virgin Airways Boeing 747 – 400 destined for Gatwick London indivertibly encroached on a closed off section of the western taxi way.

"The aircraft inadvertently encroached on a section of the airport that was undergoing repairs and which was lighted in red. As a result of the encroachment, one of the tyres on the aircraft was blown and the aircraft was disabled.

"In the circumstances the ANR Robinson Airport is currently closed, while the Civil Aviation Authority and Virgin Airlines are working assiduously to restore operations to normal."

The incident left Virgin Atlantic flight VF52 across the runway, a passenger on board the flight told the Express by phone last night.

The 452 passengers on board VF52 were asked to disembark one hour after the incident and the entire airport was then closed.

Soca artiste Machel Montano was one of the passengers.

No one was said to have been injured during the incident.

"At this point in time the Ministry is not seized of all the necessary and relevant facts and circumstances that resulted in this occurrence, but extremely thankful that there has been no loss of life or limb," the release from the Ministry stated.

"The Ministry of Transport would like to advise that all contingency plans are in place to accommodate passengers who have been displaced by the mishap that has occurred with a Virgin Atlantic plane at the ANR Robinson International Airport," the release stated.

Private cars and taxis were called and took passengers away from the airport.

"For the travelling public between Trinidad and Tobago; contingency plans are being put in place by the relevant Authorities to ensure that travel between the two islands continues to be facilitated," the release from the Ministry stated.

"The Inter Island ferry remains committed to fill any void that may have arisen. The relevant Authorities are working feverishly to ensure that service to the Airport is resumed in the shortest possible time."

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