Crash-aerien 02 OCT 1990 d'un Boeing 737-247 B-2510 - Guangzhou-Baiyun Airport (CAN)
ASN logo
 

Statuts:
Date:mardi 2 octobre 1990
Heure:09:04
Type/Sous-type:Silhouette image of generic B732 model; specific model in this crash may look slightly different
Boeing 737-247
Compagnie:Xiamen Airlines
Immatriculation: B-2510
Numéro de série: 23189/1072
Année de Fabrication: 1984-12-07 (5 years 10 months)
Moteurs: 2 Pratt & Whitney JT8D-17A
Equipage:victimes: 7 / à bord: 9
Passagers:victimes: 75 / à bord: 93
Total:victimes: 82 / à bord: 102
Victime de la collision:victimes: 46
Dégats de l'appareil: Détruit
Conséquences: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Lieu de l'accident:Guangzhou-Baiyun Airport (CAN) (   Chine)
Phase de vol: A l'atterrissage (LDG)
Nature:Transport de Passagers Nat.
Aéroport de départ:Xiamen Airport (XMN/ZSAM), Chine
Aéroport de destination:Guangzhou-Baiyun Airport (CAN/ZGGG), Chine
Numéro de vol:MF8301
Détails:
Xiamen Airlines Flight 8301 took off from Xiamen (XMN), China at 06:57 for a domestic flight to Guangzhou (CAN). There were nine crew members and 93 passengers on board.
Shortly after takeoff a man, who had been sitting in the 16th row, suddenly rushed forward. He forced his way into the cockpit, telling the crew he had 7 kg of explosives strapped to his body. He ordered the crew to fly to Taiwan. All cockpit crewmembers then had to leave the cockpit, with the captain remaining in his seat. The airplane had just enough fuel to reach Hong Kong, but the hijacker threatened to blow up the plane if the captain would land in Hong Kong. The airplane was running out of fuel and the captain had to make an emergency landing at Guangzhou.
During landing or in the final phase of the approach a struggle took place in the cockpit. The Boeing touched down hard and swung to the right. It clipped a parked China Southwest Airlines Boeing 707 (B-2402) plane, ripping open the cockpit. The 737 continued and struck the left wing and centre fuselage of a China Southern Boeing 757 (B-2812) which was waiting for takeoff clearance. It then flipped over and broke apart. A fire broke out.
A total of 120 occupants of both aircraft were killed. Eight people later died in hospital. Among the fatalities, 82 victims came from B-2510 and 46 from B-2812.

The hijacker was a 21-year old male. No explosives were found on his body. He was wanted by the local police from Linli County because he had stolen 17,000 yuan (US 3,600 by 1990 standards) from his company.

Sources:
» FSF Flight Safety Digest December 1990 (p.13-14)
» Correlation of Trauma and Cause of Death to Accident Reconstruction: A Case of a Flight Accident Report / Jian-Xiong Min, M.D. and Min-Zhueng Jia, M.D. (Journal of Forensic Sciences, Vol. 37, issue 2)
» Aviation Week & Space Technology 8 October 1990 (31)


Photos

photo of Boeing-737-247-B-2510
accident date: 02-10-1990
type: Boeing 737-247
registration: B-2510
 

Plan
Ce plan montre l'aéroport de départ ainsi que la supposée destination du vol. La ligne fixe reliant les deux aéroports n'est pas le plan de vol exact.
La distance entre Xiamen Airport et Guangzhou-Baiyun Airport est de 514 km (321 miles).
Accident location: Approximate; accuracy within a few kilometers.

Les informations ci-dessus ne représentent pas l'opinion de la 'Flight Safety Foundation' ou de 'Aviation Safety Network' sur les causes de l'accident. Ces informations prélimimaires sont basées sur les faits tel qu'ils sont connus à ce jour.
languages: languages

Share

Boeing 737-200

  • 1114 built
  • 50ème loss
  • 29ème accident fatal
  • le accident 8ème le plus grave (à ce moment là)
  • le accident 18ème le plus grave (en ce moment)
» safety profile

 Chine
  • le accident 3ème le plus grave (à ce moment là)
  • le accident 8ème le plus grave (en ce moment)
» safety profile

The Aviation Safety Network is an exclusive service provided by:
Quick Links:

CONNECT WITH US: FSF on social media FSF Facebook FSF Twitter FSF Youtube FSF LinkedIn FSF Instagram

©2023 Flight Safety Foundation

1920 Ballenger Av, 4th Fl.
Alexandria, Virginia 22314
www.FlightSafety.org