'All I Could Do Was Pray'

Passengers Recall Disorder After Plane Skidded Off Toronto Runway and Caught Fire

By Sam Coates
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 4, 2005; Page A10

TORONTO, Aug. 3 -- When the wheels of Air France Flight 358 finally touched the runway at Pearson International Airport at 4:02 p.m. Tuesday, dozens of passengers burst into applause.

Their display was a mixture of relief and nervous adrenaline after the plane, en route from Paris, safely navigated a pounding storm and streaks of lightning.


Emergency personnel inspect the charred wreckage of Air France Flight 358 in Toronto after it skidded into a ravine during a heavy rainstorm and lightning alert.
Emergency personnel inspect the charred wreckage of Air France Flight 358 in Toronto after it skidded into a ravine during a heavy rainstorm and lightning alert. (By J.p. Moczulski -- Reuters)

The respite was short-lived.

"When we touched the ground, people were clapping and cheering because we thought it was going to be a fine landing. Seconds later, we skidded off the runway and it was chaos," said Eddie Ho, 19, a Canadian student returning from South Africa.

"Lockers swung open, bags came falling down, ceiling tiles came off," he said at the airport Wednesday. "You were just sitting there like a rag doll. All I could do was pray."

As investigators and air safety officials began sifting through wreckage of the Airbus A340, the full story of the amazing escape of all 309 people on board began to emerge, told by passengers and rescue workers.

The crash, in which the jetliner skidded off the runway and into a ravine, left 43 people with minor injuries, officials said. Fourteen were still in the hospital Wednesday.

At first, the atmosphere on board was relatively orderly -- until passengers began to smell smoke and see flames rising outside the windows.

"The first five seconds after the plane stopped, people were very calm. They were actually quite decent, until they started seeing the fire. Then they started screaming . . . and all hell broke loose," said Olivier Dubois, who was returning from his sister's wedding in Paris.

"The flight attendants started shouting, 'Jump out! Jump out!' It was chaotic," he said. People were climbing over seats, parents were clinging to children, and some even tried to grab their luggage, Dubois said.

While officials praised the flight crew for getting the passengers off the plane rapidly, some on board said a number of problems held up the evacuation.

Some passengers were confused by an announcement over the public address system saying everyone should stay in their seats after the plane had stopped. Several had already started to smell smoke.


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