Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2015 11:11 AM

    HALIFAX — The Transportation Safety Board says investigators will spend the today documenting the site and sorting through the debris after an Air Canada flight crashed Sunday at Halifax's airport.

    Mike Cunningham, the regional manager of air investigations, says a team of investigators are looking through debris from the point where the plane touched down at Halifax Stanfield International Airport to where it came to rest.

    Cunningham says they have had a preliminary discussion with the flight crew and have also started interviewing passengers.

    He says the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder have been sent to the board's engineering branch in Ottawa and will undergo a preliminary analysis.

    Cunningham says it's not known yet when the wreckage will be removed from the runway, but he says it could be before the end of the week.

    Cunningham says flight AC624 touched down about 335 metres short of the runway and hit an antenna array, where the A320 Airbus lost its landing gear, and then slid another 335 metres down the runway on its belly before coming to a stop.

    The 133 passengers and five crew members all survived the crash, but some two dozen people were taken to hospital where most were treated and released from hospital.

    Air Canada has said none of the injuries were considered life threatening.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children

    Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children
    HOPE, B.C. — The brother of a woman killed last year says he and his wife are struggling to gain custody of his sister's three children in foster care.

    Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children

    Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht

    Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht
    TORONTO — The billionaire co-founder of the Tim Hortons chain is among the targets of a lawsuit that alleges his son sexually and physically assaulted a woman on his luxury megayacht in Florida, according to her unproven statement of claim.

    Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach
    VIEUX FORT, Saint Lucia — A man reported to be Canadian is in custody in connection with the drowning of a young boy at a beach in Vieux Fort, St. Lucia.

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper and billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates are urging the world to keep the issue of maternal, newborn and child health as a development priority.

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women
    OTTAWA — Getting Canada's Aboriginal Peoples, the provinces and territories and the federal government to gather together in the same room is no small feat.

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges
    REGINA — A Regina man who volunteered with Scouts Canada as well as with church groups is facing sex-related charges involving teenagers.

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges