3 killed as light aircraft crashes in Tokyo suburb
A small plane crashed into a quiet neighborhood in Tokyo yesterday, killing the 36-year-old pilot, a passenger and a woman on the ground, while three people were pulled alive from the wreckage, officials said.
The single-engine propeller plane plowed into and set ablaze a row of houses just minutes after takeoff from an airport used by small aircraft about 500 meters away in Tokyo’s western suburb of Chofu.
Television footage showed a mangled plane, broken up with its tail upside down, resting on a crushed car in a residential lot as dozens of firefighters battled the blaze and treated the victims.
The roofs of the two houses next to the site were damaged.
Tokyo Fire Department spokesman Teruaki Seki said the dead included the pilot, one of the four passengers and a woman who was inside the house where the plane crashed into, setting it ablaze.
Five others, including the three remaining passengers and two people on the ground, were taken to hospitals, but their conditions were not immediately known.
The plane was operated by a private company for aviation training and other activities, not commercial air travel, said Hideaki Kobayashi, the Tokyo metropolitan government official in charge of Chofu Airport.
Police are investigating the cause of the crash.
Minako Akiyama, a resident in the neighborhood, said that after the crash, she heard the loud sound of something being torn. “I ran upstairs, then I saw the house just over there on fire, with a tail of the plane sticking out of it,” she said.
“I’ve lived here a long time and am used to the noise of planes, but it was obviously abnormal,” Kotaro Sunaga, a 32-year-old businessman, told Jiji Press.
The PA-46 Mirage plane, produced by Piper Aircraft, was flying to Izu Oshima Island, about 100 kilometers south of Tokyo in the Pacific Ocean, according to the Chofu Airport. The airport was opened in 1941 for Japan’s Imperial Army during World War II and is now administered by the Tokyo metropolitan government.
The plane that crashed yesterday experienced an accident in October 2004, when it crashed into a field in the northern Japanese city of Sapporo in a failed takeoff, according to a transport ministry report. Nobody was injured in that accident, which the ministry attributed to operational error.
The weather agency said yesterday was clear and sunny with little wind, while public broadcaster NHK said the plane passed a checkup in May.
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