Tuesday, 20 June 2017

SOUTH AFRICA: Kulula B737 Hits Turbulence, Passenger Injured

A Kululu Boeing 737-800 was on approach to Cape Town in adverse weather conditions when the aircraft encountered severe turbulence causing injuries to one passenger. The aircraft continued for a safe landing on Cape Town’s runway 01.

The airline reported the aircraft was about 20 minutes before landing in clear weather when the aircraft encountered severe turbulence causing injuries to a passenger. Cabin crew assisted the passenger.

We had just passed over Somerset West when the plane suddenly dropped what felt like three storeys, and began tilting sideways, a still-shaken Prins recalled.

He said the plane was battered by extreme turbulence, and felt as if it was being ‘trapped in air pockets between the clouds’.

At one point you could hear the engine; it sounded like a car accelerating very fast. The next thing we knew, the plane was nose up, with the tail pointed downwards. It felt like the pilot was trying to stabilise it by flying up and out of all the clouds and turbulence.

The six-minute ordeal felt like it had lasted a lifetime.

I am still traumatised. I was screaming, everyone around me was screaming. Three or four people got out of their seats at one point while the plane was going sideways, and tried to open the emergency exits.

An air hostess came over the radio to tell us to remain calm and in our seats, and then the plane was battered by the winds again, and she started screaming too.

When the pilot eventually managed to regain control of the aircraft and make a shaky landing at Cape Town International, he couldn’t believe that they had survived the flight.

I thought I was going to die. I kept thinking about my three children, and my four-year-old daughter who had begged to fly with me this morning.

William Smook, senior consultant for Meropa Communications, issued a statement on behalf of kulula.com:

A passenger aboard a kulula.com flight to Cape Town International Airport today was hurt when the aircraft encountered severe turbulence during the descent after the fasten-seatbelt instruction had been given.

The incident occurred in clear weather about 20 minutes out of Cape Town. Our highly-trained crew assisted the passenger, Smook said.

He added that the safety of Kulula customers and crew was the foremost priority.

Meanwhile, Airports Company South Africa (Acsa) spokesperson Deidre Davids confirmed that no flights had been cancelled flying in or out of Cape Town International Airport today.

Most flights departed or arrived on schedule, and all flights remain on schedule for this evening. However, two flights that were due to land in Cape Town this morning were diverted, due to the heavy winds.

One plane diverted to East London, and the other to Johannesburg,Davids said.

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