Transportation Safety Board deployed in B.C. after plane crashes and catches fire

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The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says it is deploying a team of investigators to Surrey, B.C., after a small plane crashed in a field in the Metro Vancouver community.

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Firefighters say the pilot was taken to hospital with serious injuries.

Surrey Deputy Fire Chief John Lehmann says crews received a call at 1 p.m. Friday about an ultralight aircraft crashing in a field east of 152 Street.

He says rescuers found no one except the badly injured pilot aboard the plane.

  1. Ripudaman Singh Malik (centre) leaves B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver, B.C. with his supporters after he was found not guilty in the bombing of an Air India flight 182 in 1985, Wednesday March 16, 2005. Malikl won't be getting back $9.2 million in legal fees. Malik had admitted in a B.C. Supreme Court case that it would be difficult for him to convince the government to cover his legal bills.

    Ripudaman Singh Malik, acquitted in Air India bombing, shot dead in Surrey

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  2. Small aircraft makes an emergency landing on Surrey, B.C. highway

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Lehmann says the crash ignited a fire in the field that grew quickly because of windy conditions and dry fuel at the site.

He says the blaze spread to about 1.5 hectares before 28 firefighters extinguished it, preventing it from reaching any structures.

Surrey RCMP say the condition of the injured pilot was unknown.

The Mounties say traffic on 152 Street between 72 and 68 avenues was shut down in both directions and motorists were asked to plan alternate routes.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 2, 2023.

References

  1. ^ Ripudaman Singh Malik, acquitted in Air India bombing, shot dead in Surrey (nationalpost.com)
  2. ^ Small aircraft makes an emergency landing on Surrey, B.C. highway (nationalpost.com)