Boeing 737 catches fires, skids off runway at Senegal airport, injuring at least 11 people

A Boeing 737 plane carrying 85 people skidded off a runway at the airport in Dakar, Senegal’s capital, injuring 11 people, bringing the facility to a halt, according to the transport minister and footage from a passenger that showed the aircraft on fire.

“Our plane just caught fire,” wrote Malian musician Cheick Siriman Sissoko in a post on Facebook that showed passengers jumping down the emergency slides at night as flames engulfed one side of the aircraft. In the background, people can be heard screaming.

Transport Minister El Malick Ndiaye said the Air Sénégal flight operated by TransAir was headed to Bamako late on Wednesday with 79 passengers, two pilots and four cabin crew.

The plane “came off the runway during its take-off phase” in the early hours, the airport said.

The Blaise Diagne airport said an investigation was under way to determine the cause of the accident, which occurred at around midnight as the Transair-owned Boeing 737-300 chartered by Air Senegal was preparing to fly to Mali.

Boeing plane came off the runway during take-off in Senegal early on Thursday, forcing the international airport near the capital Dakar to close, Photo: X/AviationSafety

A nighttime video shared on social media showed a plane with the logo of Senegal-based airline Transair standing in grass with a wing covered in fire-suppressing foam.

Reuters was not immediately able to verify the video.

The airport statement said it activated emergency protocols to evacuate passengers.

The aircraft has been “immobilised” away from the runway and the emergency plan was triggered by airport authorities as soon as they were alerted, it said.

The Aviation Safety Network, which tracks airline accidents, published photos of the damaged plane in a grassy field surrounded by fire suppressant foam on X, formerly known as Twitter. One engine appeared to have broken apart, and a wing was also damaged, according to the photos.

ASN is part of the Flight Safety Foundation, a non-profit group that aims to promote safe air travel and tracks accidents.

Additional reporting by Associated Press, Agence France-Presse

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