Air India plane bound for US makes emergency landing in Russia
Al Jazeera
Krasnoyarsk airport says plane carrying 244 passengers and crew was forced to land due to an activated smoke detector.
An Air India passenger plane flying from New Delhi to San Francisco has made an emergency landing in Russia after the crew detected a potential issue in the cargo hold area, according to the airline, in its second such incident on the route in just over a year.
Many carriers, including United States and European Union airlines, avoid Russian airspace because of the war in Ukraine, but Air India uses that route, giving it a flying time and cost advantage over US-bound flights.
The incident also puts an added spotlight on the embattled aircraft manufacturer, Boeing, whose aircraft was used in the flight. A number of Boeing planes have been involved in air incidents in recent months.
The Boeing 777 aircraft, carrying 225 passengers and 19 flight crew, made the precautionary move landing safely in the Russian region of Siberia at the Krasnoyarsk International Airport, the airline said in a statement on X on Friday.
“Representatives from the Indian consulate in Moscow have travelled overnight and are working with Russian authorities to allow passengers to move to hotels, which have been on standby throughout the night.”