Mid-Air Scare: Turkish Airlines Makes Emergency Landing In Kolkata After Right Engine Fire

<p>A Turkish Airlines flight travelling from Kathmandu to Istanbul made an emergency landing at Kolkata&rsquo;s Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport (NSCBI) on Wednesday after the pilot reported a fire in one of the aircraft&rsquo;s engines.</p> <p>The aircraft, flight THY-727, landed safely at 2.49 pm, after the pilot alerted Kolkata Air Traffic Control about a fire in the right engine, airport authorities said.</p> <p>The plane, carrying 236 passengers, remains grounded at the Kolkata airport and is undergoing inspection, according to the NSCBI airport director.</p> <h2><strong>Fire Reported Shortly After Take-off From Kathmandu</strong></h2> <p>The incident also triggered an emergency at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, where the aircraft had taken off minutes earlier.</p> <p>&ldquo;The Turkish Airlines with flight number 'THY-727' caught fire within four minutes of the take off, the right engine caught fire. The flight took off at 1:28 PM (Local Time),&rdquo; Teknath Sitaula, General Manager of Tribhuvan International Airport, told ANI.</p> <p>Officials said the aircraft reported the emergency soon after departure.</p> <h2><strong>&lsquo;Pan-Pan&rsquo; Alert Declared Mid-Air</strong></h2> <p>At 1.38 pm (IST), the pilot declared &lsquo;Pan-Pan&rsquo;, an international aviation urgency signal used for time-sensitive situations that do not pose an immediate threat.</p> <p>After detecting the fire, the pilot diverted the aircraft west of Kathmandu, shut down the affected engine and held the plane in the air for around 10 minutes, officials said.</p> <p>The flight reported at 1.51 pm (IST) that the fire was under control and that it was proceeding towards Kolkata with one engine inoperative.</p> <h2><strong>Crew Opts to Divert to Kolkata</strong></h2> <p>&ldquo;The pilot informed the Kathmandu tower and continued flying on a single engine, holding the aircraft for some time over the Dharke area of Dhading district, to assess the situation,&rdquo; Gyanendra Bhul, deputy spokesperson of the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN), told The Kathmandu Post.</p> <p>After conducting further checks, the crew concluded that the aircraft was not fit for a long-haul flight. Although they had the option to return to Kathmandu or divert to Bhairahawa, the pilots chose to land in Kolkata, citing safety considerations, the report said.</p>

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