The wreckage of the Boeing 777 plane
The pilot of a plane which crashed at San Francisco airport, killing
two people, may have been temporarily blinded by a bright light as he
came into land.
Lee Kang Kuk, who was making his first landing at the airport and had
just 43 hours' experience at the controls of the Boeing 777, said he saw
a bright flash as he approached the runway.
It happened around 35 seconds before impact when Asiana Airlines flight
214 was around 500ft (150m) off the ground - the point at which the
aircraft began to slow down and drop steeply, reports Sky News.
Deborah Hersman, who chairs the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), said the use of lasers had not been ruled out.
It is not clear whether the flash of light caused the crash or whether other factors were to blame.
The pilot's claim came as phone calls to the emergency services made by
passengers on board the plane were released, demonstrating the
confusion caused when the Boeing 777 hit the runway.
Pleading for ambulances to be sent, one woman can be heard saying:
"There are a lot of people that need help ... We have people over here
who weren't found and they're burned really badly."
Meanwhile, it has emerged that passengers were initially told not to evacuate the aircraft.
The plane hit a sea wall as it came into land, causing its tail fin to
break off and the rest of the fuselage to spin across the runway.
However, the NTSB found people did not begin leaving the plane until a fire erupted 90 seconds after impact.
"We don't know what the pilots were thinking, though I can tell you in
previous accidents there have been crews that don't evacuate, they wait
for other vehicles to come to be able to get the passengers out safely,"
Ms Hersman said.
She suggested that the pilots in the cockpit may not have been in a position to spot the fire outside the plane.
At least one of the emergency escape slides opened inside the aircraft, pinning down two flight attendants.
Three other crew members were flung from the aircraft onto the runway but survived.
The NTSB is using pilot interviews, cockpit recordings and control
tower communications to piece together the moments leading up to the
crash.
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