THIS is the moment a passenger plane spat flames and sparks from its wing in a horror landing after its one of its wheels failed.
It was one of two other landing horrors to happen on the same night as the devastating South Korea crash – which is feared to have killed 179 people.
The Air Canada plane was teetering to one side on the runway[/caption] The wing of the Air Canada flight bursts into flames[/caption] Passengers are thrown into chaos inside the aircraft[/caption] The moment the wing begins to catch flame[/caption]The Air Canada flight going from St John’s to Halifax threw the passengers into turmoil as it crashed down on the runway.
Meanwhile, thousands of miles away in Norway, another jet dodged disaster as it came skidding off of the runway following a suspected hydraulics failure.
The plane in Norway was a Boeing 737-800 – the same type of jet which crashed in South Korea.
The horror footage shows one of the Air Canada‘s wings wings erupt into a ball of fire on its descent – as the fliers look on in terror.
The plane wing can be seen beginning to spark, and then quickly catches fire that pulsates in the wind.
They can be seen inside holding on for dear life as their flight comes dangerously close to disaster.
The video pans to them as the interior can be seen coming apart and they are forced into a violent shake.
The shock moments were shared to social media platform X at 4.28am.
It is believed that one of the Air Canada flight AC2259’s tires failed to deploy during landing, which sent the aircraft careening along the tarmac at a reported 20 degree angle.
Passenger Nikki Valentine told CBC News: “The plane started to sit at about a 20-degree angle to the left, and we heard a loud crash sound as the wing skidded along the pavement, along with what I presume was the engine.
“The plane shook quite a bit and we started seeing fire on the left side of the plane and smoke started coming in the windows.”
Somehow there were no reported fatalities or major injuries as a result of the incident.
The flight came skidding into Halifax Stanfield International Airport, which had to be temporarily shut down whilst authorities delft with the carnage.
The aircraft was unable to reach the terminal and the crew and 73 passengers were off-loaded by bus.
It has since reopened, according to the airport.
In a statement, airport authorities confirmed the emergency and assured the public that a thorough investigation was underway.
In another plane mishap on the same night, a flight in Norway which carried 182 people.
A KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Boeing 737-800 faced hydraulic system failure shortly after taking off from Oslo Airport to Amsterdam.
The pilots were forced to quickly divert to Sandefjord Torp Airport, located 110 kilometres from Oslo, for an emergency landing.
As the plane came down, it skidded along the runway so far that it hit the end of it and went on further to the grassy area adjacent to it.
No injuries were reported as passengers were promptly evacuated using mobile stairs.
Authorities have initiated an investigation into the incident.
It’s thought that a hydraulics failure caused this crash in Norway[/caption] The KLM plane was left on the grass adjacent to the runway[/caption] Somehow there were no reported fatalities or major injuries as a result of the incident[/caption]The Sun is reporting on a similar incident that is unfolding, which has seen as plane crash in South Korea leaving at least 179 feared dead.
Horrific scenes unfolded in South Korea when a Boeing 737-800’s landing gear failed and the plane hit the tarmac on its belly at Muan International Airport.
The official death toll from the disaster currently stands at 167 – but only two people from the 181 passengers and crew are believed to have survived.
The confirmed death toll is steadily climbing as bodies are pulled from the smouldering wreckage.
Footage showed the doomed flight’s final moments as it hurtled off the runway, hit an embankment, and exploded in a fireball.
The packed jet – Jeju Air Flight 7C2216 – was carrying 181 people to the southwestern city of Muan from Bangkok, Thailand.
Firefighters said two crew members had, miraculously, survived after being pulled from the back of the plane.
Weeping families have been seen gathering at the airport as South Korea comes to terms with its worst air disaster in decades.
The South Korean plane bursts into a ball of flame – claiming the lives of nearly 200 people so far[/caption] It is thought to be South Korea’s worst air disaster in decades[/caption] The plane comes apart upon its devastating impact[/caption]