A Japan Airlines aircraft that was carrying passengers burst into flames on the runway at Tokyo’s Haneda airport after a collision with a coast guard plane.
All 379 passengers, including eight children, and crew on board Flight 516 were evacuated, a feat described as a “miracle” by a former pilot.
However of the six people aboard the coast guard plane, five crew have been found dead while the pilot was able to escape.
Flames were seen coming out of the windows of the Airbus A-350 as it skidded down the tarmac after landing.
The fire quickly took hold and grew to an inferno as the hull broke in two, despite fierce efforts from teams of firefighters to control the blaze.
Dramatic video taken by a passenger looking out of the aircraft window shows the plane moving down the runway, leaving a trail of smoke and burning with an orange light.
Sounds of loud rumbling from the engines can be heard as the plane speeds along the tarmac and inside the plane an alert sounds repeatedly.
The unknown passenger said “I thought I was going to die” in their post on X alongside footage showing what looks like smoke inside the cabin.
All runways at Haneda – Japan’s busiest airport – are currently closed as at least 70 fire trucks and other vehicles work to extinguish the blaze.
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Inside the Japan Airlines flight as it caught fire
Evacuation of Flight 516 ‘a miracle’
Japan Airlines says the flight landed at Haneda where it then collided with a coast guard aircraft.
It was seen travelling along the runway with flames on board before coming to a stop, as the fire engulfed the airliner.
Rodger Whitfield, a former commercial pilot, told Sky News “I think first of all, you’ve got to say that we just witnessed a miracle.
“The way they got all those passengers off that aeroplane is almost beyond belief…
“For the crew to have got all the passengers off, it’s a miracle. There’s no two ways about it.”
There were no life-threatening injuries reported among those evacuated from the jet, according to Japan Airlines.
Another former pilot, Alastair Rosenschein, said it could have been “so much worse”.
The Airbus A-350 aircraft – Flight 516 – had departed from Shin-Chitose airport in Hokkaido.
Five coast guard crew found dead
Six people were aboard the coast guard plane, which had been headed for Niigata airport base to assist with the ongoing earthquake relief effort.
The pilot of the smaller plane escaped, the coast guard has said, but the remaining five crew are reported by Japanese broadcaster NHK to have been found dead.
The aircraft was a Bombardier Dash-8, a propeller driven short-haul plane that typically have between 50 and 80 seats.
Pilot and aviation consultant Tim Atkinson told Sky News that the planes weigh 20-something tonnes and are “not anything like the size of the A350s” but are “sizeable enough to have a significant volume of fuel on board”.
Four people have been killed and 27 are injured after a building collapsed on a beach in Majorca – with people still trapped inside.
The building – reported to be a restaurant – collapsed in the capital of the island, Palma – a tourist hotspot.
Pictures have emerged of emergency services evacuating people from the building, with some being taken out on a stretcher.
Firefighters and police were called to the scene just after 8pm local time, the Majorca Daily Bulletin reports.
Witnesses reported the terrace at the top of a popular restaurant had collapsed.
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The three-minute video of five young female Israeli soldiers being taken by Hamas from their base on 7 October is harrowing and extremely upsetting to watch.
The soldiers are Liri Albag, Karina Ariev, Agam Berger, Daniela Gilboa and Naama Levy.
They all worked at the Nahal Oz observation base, monitoring activity on the Gaza border.
The video, which has been edited in places, was filmed around 9am on the Saturday.
It starts with the five soldiers, unarmed and helpless, standing facing the wall as their hands are tied behind their backs.
Some of them have bloody faces, they all look shocked and frightened.
“You dogs, we will step on you,” one Hamas fighter can be heard saying.
“I have friends in Palestine,” one of the girls pleads. She’s ordered to stay quiet.
They are made to sit down and threatened with being shot.
At this point, another of the soldiers asks to call her friend in Gaza, presumably in a desperate attempt to convince the attackers not to harm them.
There appear to be more than 10 Hamas fighters, all heavily armed and with bullet proof vests on.
Some have green Hamas bandanas around their heads. They appear relaxed, at one point stopping to pray.
It exposes the complete failure of Israel to foresee and prevent the attacks.
Finally, the video cuts to the female soldiers being hurried out of the building and put into one of their own khaki army jeeps.
One is carried, another hops on an injured leg.
There is the sound of heavy gunfire as Israeli forces battle Hamas nearby.
Many Israeli soldiers were killed in the fighting there that day.
The video was put together from body cameras worn by the Hamas attackers that day and released by The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, to put pressure on the Israeli government.
The video, the group said, “is a damning testament to the nation’s failure to bring home the hostages”.
The families have asked the video be broadcast “until somebody wakes up”.
Liri Albag, who is 18, is described by the Hostages and Missing Families Forum as having a “heart of gold”.
Her life “revolves around music and the arts”, they added.
Karina Ariev
Karina Ariev is 19 and “loves the field of cosmetics, makeup and beauty”. Her ambition, the group says, is to make a career in this industry.
Her mother told reporters in October she spoke to them on the morning of the attack, saying she “screamed and said she loves us very much”.
“She told us to continue our lives,” she added.
Agam Berger
Agam Berger, 19, volunteers with people who have special needs and with children who have learning difficulties.
Her father told the Associated Press in March one of his three daughters has not gone to school since 7 October, while one of his young daughters has stopped eating.
His wife, an engineer, does not go to work and he tries to avoid the news to save himself the daily roller coaster.
Daniela Gilboa
Daniela Gilboa is 19.
Her mother, Orly Gilboa told Reuters the girls “suffer there every minute, every second”.
“So please, please do whatever you can to bring them home,” she added.
Naama Levy
Naama Levy, 19, is described by her family as strong, according to the Times of Israel.
She’s a triathlete, used to working hard in training and pushing past obstacles – which are traits her family hopes are helping her withstand captivity.
She’s also the great-granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, the paper adds, and took part in the Hands of Peace project in the US, which worked for peace between Israel and the Palestinians until it shut in March.
Ceasefire talks have all but broken down since Israel and Hamas couldn’t agree a deal a few weeks ago.
Last night, in Tel Aviv, the Israeli war cabinet ordered the negotiating team to restart talks, reportedly with a fresh mandate.
Egyptian mediators are now said to be exploring options, although Cairo threatened to pull out of talks earlier in the week over a disagreement with Israel.
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Many of the people seriously injured on the London-Singapore flight that hit severe turbulence need operations on their spines, a Bangkok hospital has said.
A spokesperson for the Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand, said six Britons are among 20 people still in intensive care after the Boeing 777 Singapore Airlines flight sharply descended 6,000ft (1,800 metres) after hitting the turbulence over the Andaman Sea.
Others in the ICU include six Malaysians, three Australians, two Singaporeans and one person each from Hong Kong, New Zealand, and the Philippines.
Some of the 211 passengers on board flight SQ321 described their “sheer terror” as the aircraft began shuddering, causing people to be “launched into the ceiling” while others laid paralysed on the floor.
Geoff Kitchen, 73, from Gloucestershire in the UK died from a suspected heart attack after the freak incident despite flight crew trying to revive him for 20 minutes.
One of the passengers, Josh Silverstone, told Sky News that there was an alert for the seatbelts to come on and then there was a “huge bang”.
“I remember waking up on the floor and just hearing people crying and I am looking around and seeing blood and the ceiling falling through,” he said.
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‘I remember waking up on the floor’
Mr Silverstone said there was an elderly lady in front of him who couldn’t move and couldn’t remember her name or why she was on the flight, while cabin crew members, who had their own injuries, were lying on the floor with passengers making sure they were okay.
The Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital said it had provided medical care to a total of 104 people after the flight was diverted to Thailand.
It remains unclear what exactly caused the turbulence, but data from Flightradar24, said “the flight encountered a rapid change in vertical rate, consistent with a sudden turbulence event”.
At 3.03pm local time, the flight changed course and began its diversion to Bangkok and around 20 minutes later declared an emergency.
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Moment plane hits turbulence mapped
Tim Atkinson, an aviation consultant and pilot, told the Sky News Daily podcast he believes “it’s fairly clear” the Singapore Airlines flight “encountered atmospheric turbulence”.
He noted that the area – called the Intertropical Convergence Zone – where the Boeing 777 plunged 6,000 feet is “renowned among pilots, and I dare say passengers, for turbulence”.