Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Edmonton

Edmonton-bound WestJet flight lands safely in Iceland after emergency

An Edmonton-bound WestJet flight from London, England, has landed safely in Iceland after being diverted due to a "potential mechanical issue," the airline said Saturday.

Pilots reported an emergency just over two hours into the flight from London, England, to Edmonton

Passengers exit the WestJet plane that was forced to land in Iceland after an emergency on Saturday. (Supplied/Cody Wheeler)

An Edmonton-boundWestJet flight from London, England, has landed safely in Iceland after being diverteddue to a "potential mechanical issue," the airline said Saturday.

The flight, number WS27,left London's Gatwick airport at around 11:45a.m. local timeafter a delay, and was scheduled to arrive in Edmonton just before 1 p.m.

Pilots reported an emergency just over two hours into the flight, andthe Boeing 767 wasthought to be dumping fuel as it circledover the Atlantic Ocean nearKeflavikInternational Airport, near Reykjavik,Iceland.

WestJetspokeswoman Lauren Stewart said the plane's crew detected a "potential mechanical issue," but did not specify what that issue was.

The captain told us through the PA that the engine had a malfunction of some sort, and that we had to make an emergency landing within the next 10minutes- AbdisalamAbdillahi, passenger

The flight landed safely at KeflavikInternational Airport at around 8:45 a.m. MT.

In an email, Stewart said the declaration of an emergency does not necessarily mean an "actual emergency" has occurred on board the flight.

"Itis declared to establish priority landing and to ensure the availability of emergency vehicles whether needed or not, and is a measure taken out of an abundance of caution," Stewart said.

Gudni Sigurdsson, aspokesman from Isavia, the national airport and air navigation service provider in Iceland, said the WestJetaircraft had "reduced power from one engine." The captain of the flight decided to land in Iceland "for security reasons," he said in an email.

"The aircraft circled for some time to burn fuel before landing and then landed safely. There were 258 passengers on board the aircraft."

'I thought it was just turbulence'

In a message to CBC, passenger Abdisalam Abdillahisaid passengers heard a "big bang" about an hour into the flight.

"I thought it was just turbulence, but the captain told us through the PA that the engine had a malfunction of some sort, and that we had to make an emergency landing within the next 10minutes," he said.

"Some people slept through it and there wasn't that much of a reaction. But the people [who] were by the wing definitely heard it."

Abdillahisaid the pilot then told passengers the plane needed to burn fuel and wouldn't land for another hour.

He said passengers are being told they will have to wait until tomorrow to board another flight.

Passenger Dan Hayden said the flight was "very busy" but not quite sold out, and that passengers are waiting to hearmore on what will happen next.

WestJet said the aircraft will remain in Iceland for maintenance.

Autumn Hodgins said WestJet provided dinner and hotel rooms for stranded passengers. (Skype)

PassengerAutumn Hodginssaid the pilot and flight attendants were calm and reassuring as the flight diverted to Iceland.

WestJet bought the stranded travellers dinner and set them up in hotels, she said later Saturday afternoon.

Hodgins said WestJet has been "fantastic" in coordinating a team to take care of the passengers, but said she's not sure if she'd fly internationally with the airline again.

"The most important part here is that everyone is safe and everyone is OK," she said.

WestJet's London flights prompt complaints, compensation

WestJet's service to London has been subject to a wave of complaints since it launched in May 2016.

It's the first overseas destination for thefour wide-bodied Boeing 767 jets that it bought from Qantas. The jets have an average age of 24 years, and began having mechanical problems.

In a video posted to WestJet's internal YouTube channel on June 16, 2016, chief executive officer Gregg Saretsky explainedthe problem, calling the route a "hobbled operation."

"The 767s have been giving us lots of grief, lots of mechanical problems," said Saretsky in the video.

"We're finding that when things break, because some of the parts are so old, we don't have them in store. And then we're doing a global search through the AOG desk to find them and then it's taking two or three days to get these things. We don't want to keep them in stock because they break once every 20 years."

WestJet WS27 passengers await their luggage at the baggage claim in Keflavik International Airport. (Supplied/Dan Hayden)

With files from Tracy Johnson