A British Airways airplane carrying 202 people struck an office building at Johannesburg's OR Tambo International Airport with its wing while taxiing for take-off late on Sunday, slightly injuring four, aviation authorities said.
The Boeing
747-400 en route for London Heathrow Airport took a runway that was too
narrow for the plane, said South African Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)
spokeswoman Phindiwe Gwebu on Monday.
"This resulted in the aircraft's right-hand wing impacting the office building," she told AFP.
The control tower "told them to take one taxiway and they took another one. They took a wrong one," said Gwebu.
Four
people inside the building were lightly injured, but the 185 passengers
and 17 crew on board were unharmed during the late-night accident,
according to the CAA.
"Four
ground-handling employees who were in the building at the time
experienced minor injuries," Airports Company South Africa (ACSA) said
in a statement.
A photo taken
by a passenger from the cabin showed the aircraft's giant wing wedged
into a quarter of the length of the small building.
Harriet Tolputt, head of media for international humanitarian organisation Oxfam, posted the pictures to Twitter.
"BA
plane crashes into building at J Burg airport. No one injured only the
pilot's pride," she posted, complaining that first-class passengers were
evacuated before the rest.
The
stuck plane had still not been able to take off by Monday morning. All
the passengers were taken to a nearby hotel, according to ACSA.
Glad there were no casualties.
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