Over 30 people were injured, some with broken bones and lacerations, when a Qantas passenger jet flying from Singapore to Perth struck turbulence today and had to make an emergency landing at a remote Australian
airport, officials said.
"While cruising in level flight, the aircraft experienced a sudden in-flight upset, resulting in injuries to a number of cabin crew and passengers, primarily in the rear of the aircraft," the Australian Air Transport Safety Bureau said in a statement.
"The crew declared a Mayday and diverted the aircraft to Learmonth, near Exmouth ... where it landed without further incident," it said.
Qantas said flight QF72 was an A330-300 with 303 passengers and 10 crew.
"Early reports indicate that three cabin crew and approximately 30 passengers sustained injuries, including about 15 with serious injuries, namely broken bones and lacerations," Air Transport Safety Bureau said.
Learmonth has only one runway and is used mainly by oil and gas companies. The nearest town is the port of Exmouth, around 1,100 kms north of Perth.
Qantas has been hit by a spate of incidents recently. In one, Australian air safety investigators blamed an oxygen bottle for a mid-air explosion which blew a minivan-size hole in the side of Qantas 747 last month.
The Qantas 747-400 carrying 346 passengers and 19 crew suffered a sudden loss of cabin pressure during a flight from Hong Kong to Melbourne on July 25th, forcing the aircraft to make an emergency descent before diverting to the Philippines, where it landed safely in Manila.