Monday, March 17, 2014

US Airways plane blows tyre on takeoff, passengers evacuated

A US Airways plane blew a tyre during takeoff late Thursday from Philadelphia's airport, though officials reported no serious injuries.

WASHINGTON: A US Airways plane blew a tyre during takeoff late Thursday from Philadelphia's airport, though officials reported no serious injuries.
The airline said the pilot of Flight 1702 aborted takeoff for Fort Lauderdale due to the tire problem.
"Passengers were safely evacuated & we are reaccommodating passengers on a new aircraft, scheduled to depart later this evening," US Airways said on its Twitter account.
CNN reported that one person aboard suffered minor injuries.
The flight had initially been scheduled to take off from Philadelphia at 5:50 pm (2150 GMT) and arrive in Fort Lauderdale at 8:42 pm (0042 GMT), according to the airline's website.
A witness sitting in an airport terminal reported on the online travel blog flyertalk.com seeing the place "bounce twice on takeoff."
"Front gear collapsed, sparks on the runway, it then skid out of my line of sight. Light white smoke visible for about 7-10 min afterwards," added the user, writing under the handle phlwookie.
Images posted on Twitter showed the plane's nose to the ground though the aircraft remained upright. The emergency slides were deployed.
"So my plane just crashed," passenger Hannah Udren wrote on the social media platform. "I almost just died."
A photo by Will Jager posted by Twitter user Charles Davis showed passengers on the ground taking pictures of the pitched plane and selfies with the aircraft in the background.
Philadelphia International Airport authorities, also using Twitter, said: "Nose gear of plane collapsed on runway. The incident is under investigation. All passengers safely evacuated. No reported injuries.
"A big KUDOS to our emergency response team who responded to the aircraft emergency tonight for getting all our passengers evacuated safely!" it added.
The airport said the incident caused delays of up to two hours for passengers of other flights.

Taiwan scrambles ships to chase Chinese boat

A Chinese fishing boat with nine crew aboard was escorted to Taiwan on Sunday after an hours-long sea chase involving five coastguard vessels and a naval frigate, officials said.

TAIPEI: A Chinese fishing boat with nine crew aboard was escorted to Taiwan on Sunday after an hours-long sea chase involving five coastguard vessels and a naval frigate, officials said.
The crew of the "Zhe Ling Yu 69088", a 260-tonne vessel from China's eastern province of Zhejiang, were questioned by coastguards immediately after the boat arrived at Keelung harbour in northern Taiwan.
"The fishing boat will be fined TW$250,000 ($8,230) for illegal fishing," Chen Su-chuan, a coastguard captain, told AFP.
The nine will also be investigated on charges of obstructing official duties, Chen said.
The incident began Saturday when the coastguard sent a boat to the sea off Pengchiayu, a tiny islet to the north of Taiwan, following a dispute between the Chinese boat and a Taiwanese fishing vessel.
Five Taiwanese coastguards armed with stun guns and batons jumped onto the Chinese boat after it refused to halt.
Instead the Chinese skipper sped away and set his ship on autopilot which the Taiwanese coastguards could not disable.
This prompted authorities to chase the boat for more than four hours before it could be halted, the coastguard said.

Haze return in Singapore

SINGAPORE: Haze returned to Singapore on Friday, with the Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) crossing into the moderate range.
The three-hour PSI reading climbed throughout the day, from a three-hour reading of 31 at 9am.
It registered 54 at 6pm, 64 at 7pm and 71 at 8pm before dipping to 69 at 9pm.As at 9pm, the 24-hour reading was between 44 and 51.
The National Environment Agency (NEA) said the hazy conditions experienced since late Friday afternoon could be due to hot spots to the north of Singapore.
It said a total of four hot spots were detected in peninsular Malaysia while 35 hot spots were spotted in Sumatra.NEA said the hazy conditions are expected to persist overnight.
On Thursday, NEA said that an expected change in the monsoons in the later part of this month may pose some risk of transboundary haze.
The agency said in a statement that with the expected transition from the Northeast Monsoon to the inter-monsoon period, winds in the region will turn light and variable in direction, and will pose "some risk" of transboundary haze should hot spots in Sumatra persist and the prevailing winds in our region temporarily turn westerly.
The Riau province of Sumatra has been shrouded in dense haze over recent days as farmers set fires to clear land during the dry spell.
NEA added that prolonged dry weather affecting parts of the region has resulted in an escalation of hot spot activities, although the hot spot count has been low due to cloud cover and partial satellite coverage.

Selangor Water Deal ‘Binding And Irrevocable’, MoU States

The MoU between political rivals was signed by Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim (right) and Energy, Water and Green Technology Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili on February 26, 2014./The Malay MailThe MoU between political rivals was signed by Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim (right) and Energy, Water and Green Technology Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili on February 26, 2014./The Malay MailKUALA LUMPUR— Selangor appears to be getting the short end of the stick in its water agreement with Putrajaya as the construction of the long-opposed Langat 2 treatment plant is deemed “binding and irrevocable”, while the valuation of water assets is subject to negotiation.
The contentious memorandum of understanding (MoU), which was obtained by The Malay Mail Online yesterday, also did not specify exactly how the federal government will provide the RM2 billion allocation to aid the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) state government in acquiring water utilities in Selangor.
“In exchange and in order to implement the agreement on the sale and purchase of raw water between the Pahang state government and the Selangor state government, the Selangor state government must… ensure that all relevant approvals (whether they have already been identified, or will emerge) in relation to the LRAL2 from the Selangor state government or the relevant authorities are binding and irrevocable, and are in effect in any condition whatsoever and cannot be retracted, cancelled, hung, or amended, unless the federal government makes such a request,” the MoU states, referring to the Langat 2 water treatment facility and its distribution system as LRAL2.
The agreement also states that Selangor is to ensure that all necessary approvals for Langat 2, including land use and the permit for the use of forest reserve land, will be given within 30 days from the date of the MoU.
The MoU was signed by Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim and Green Technology Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili on Wednesday at a hastily-convened event in Putrajaya.
Under the MoU, Selangor will take over the operations of four water concessionaires — Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor Bhd (Syabas), Puncak Niaga Sdn Bhd (PNSB), Konsortium Abbas Sdn Bhd and Syarikat Pengeluar Air Selangor Holdings Bhd (Splash) — for RM9.65 billion, and will place these under the state-owned Kumpulan Darul Ehsan Sdn Bhd (KDEB).
The agreement states that the water management companies have until March 10, 2014, to accept KDEB’s offer.
The RM9.65 billion price tag includes the water concessionaires’ loans and bonds that were estimated at RM7.68 billion as of December 31, 2012, as well as equities, together with a return of 12 per cent a year, that equalled to RM1.972 billion as of the same date.
In exchange for Putrajaya’s RM2 billion aid to Selangor, through Pengurusan Aset Air Berhad (PAAB), the state government is to sell water assets or equity in KDEB’s water special purpose vehicle (SPV) to PAAB for RM2 billion, where the federal government can have a stake of up to 30 per cent.
PAAB will also take over the water concessionaires’ loans and bonds amounting to RM7.68 billion as payment for the water assets, or equity in KDEB’s water SPV of up to 30 per cent.
“Whatever issues that may come up in determining the value of the assets under paragraph iii and iv, which are not agreed upon between the Selangor state government, KDEB and PAAB, must be referred to an independent mediator that will be jointly determined by all parties,” states the MoU.
According to the document, Putrajaya is undertaking mitigation projects at RM909 million to resolve water supply problems in Selangor, Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya until the Langat 2 plant is in operation.
PKR deputy president Azmin Ali has criticised the agreement, noting that the Selangor government had previously said that Langat 2 is unnecessary as long as Syabas reduces non-revenue water to 20 per cent by this year, and as long as the margin of treated water is at least 12 per cent.
Water supply in Selangor has been a contentious issue since the state fell to PR in Election 2008, with residents experiencing repeated supply outages that the state administration alleged were due to sabotage by the rival Barisan Nasional coalition.
Water disruptions are set to hit 2.2 million consumers in the Klang Valley once the on-going water rationing during the unusually long dry spell is expanded tomorrow, Syabas said yesterday.

Malaysia Airlines MH370: Last communication revealed

The last communication received from a Malaysia Airlines plane suggests everything was normal on board minutes before it went missing over the South China Sea, Malaysian authorities say.
Flight MH370 replied "All right, roger that" to a radio message from Malaysian air control, authorities said.
The search has been widened to waters off both sides of the peninsula.
Meanwhile Chinese authorities have published images of what they suggest may be three pieces of wreckage.
The website of China's State Administration of Science carries three satellite images taken on Sunday - a day after the plane went missing.
The images, which appear to show fragments in the sea, were only published on Wednesday. Co-ordinates alongside them would place the objects in the South China Sea between Malaysia and Vietnam.
The China-bound plane went missing on Saturday with 239 people on board.
It vanished about an hour after it took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport, as it flew south of Vietnam's Ca Mau peninsula. No distress signal or message was sent.

Malaysian authorities revealed the plane's last communication at a news conference held in Beijing for relatives of the 154 Chinese who are among the missing passengers.
'Confusing' information

As the plane reached the boundary between Malaysian and Vietnamese airspace, the Malaysian air control announced it was handing over to Ho Chi Minh City Control.
Minutes later, all contact with Flight MH370 was lost.
China's foreign ministry said there was "too much confusion" regarding the information released about the plane's flight path.
"It is very hard for us to decide whether a given piece of information is accurate," spokesman Qin Gang told reporters in Beijing.
Relatives of missing Chinese passengers (12 March 2014)Family members have been frustrated by the lack of information about the plane's fate
Deputy Commander of Vietnam 918 Air Brigade Senior Lieutenant Nguyen Tri Thuc (right) looks out for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 off Con Dao island, 12 March 2014There are conflicting reports of the plane's last location as the search enters its fifth day
Indonesian Air Force crewmen pray prior to a search operation for the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 at Suwondo air base in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia, 12 March 2014Indonesian Air Force crewman prayed prior to a search for the missing plane
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