A
U.S. bound-American Airlines flight was forced to make an emergency landing in
Tokyo on Wednesday after hitting severe turbulence created by a strong winter
storm, with several people taken to hospital for minor injuries.
American
Airlines Flight 280, a Boeing 777-200 heading to Dallas/Fort Worth airport from
Incheon in South Korea, was flying across Japan when the plane dropped suddenly
and was rocked for 30 to 40 seconds, passengers said.
"We
were eating and all the food just flew up in the air and pretty much bounced
off and fell. There were carts all over the place," one passenger told TV
Tokyo when the aircraft landed shortly after midnight at Tokyo's Narita
airport.
Photos
posted on Twitter showed splotches of
wine on overhead bins and meals scattered
down an aisle.
Four
passengers and one crew member were taken to hospital for observation and
treatment, though none of the injuries were life-threatening, the airline said
in a statement. Japanese national broadcaster NHK said one person suffered a
broken bone.
There
were 240 passengers and 15 crew on board. The flight will continue to the
United States on Wednesday.
A
rapidly-strengthening winter storm slammed Japan's northernmost main island of
Hokkaido and a wide swathe of the nation with typhoon-strength winds and heavy
snow on Wednesday, snarling rail transport and forcing the cancellation of more
than 100 flights.
High
tides produced by the storm caused flooding in parts of Hokkaido and
authorities issued evacuation advisories for several hundred people. A
54-year-old truck driver died in a road accident, NHK said.
Reuters
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