AirAsia flight to China turns back due to engine issue, lands safely

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AirAsia aircrafts undergo maintenance in Subang on July 15, 2024. Flight AK128 was en route to Shenzhen on March 26 but turned back to Kuala Lumpur International Airport after a “pneumatic ducting burst” caused a fire in the right engine.

AirAsia said its inspection showed there was no engine fire, and that a damaged duct had caused hot air to be released into the engine.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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KUALA LUMPUR - An AirAsia flight bound for China returned to Kuala Lumpur due to an engine issue shortly after take-off and landed safely with no injuries reported, Malaysian authorities and the airline said on March 27. 

Flight AK128, an Airbus A320, was on its way to Shenzhen but turned back to Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) due to “an abnormal indication in one of the engines”, budget airline AirAsia said in a statement.

Malaysia’s Selangor state fire department said earlier that a “pneumatic ducting burst” started a fire in the right engine shortly after the flight’s 9.59pm departure on March 26.

Subsequently, AirAsia said its inspection showed there was no engine fire, and that a damaged duct had caused hot air to be released into the engine.

Firefighters ensured all passengers and crew exited the aircraft after the plane landed safely slightly past midnight, the fire department said, adding that no one was hurt.

AirAsia said all 171 passengers were transferred to another aircraft, which landed at Shenzhen Bao’an International Airport on the morning of March 27.

The initial aircraft is expected to return to service on March 31, the airline added.

Malaysia’s aviation authority will investigate the incident, local media reported, citing transport minister Anthony Loke.

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