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VIDEO: Passengers rush for safety after Dubai plane crash

Smoke rising after an Emirates flight crash landed at Dubai International Airport.
Smoke rising after an Emirates flight crash landed at Dubai International Airport.

Dramatic video recorded by a passenger shows the scramble to safety after an airliner crash-landed in Dubai.

An aviation expert says hot weather could have played a part in the drama involving an Emirates airliner at Dubai’s main airport, which left one firefighter dead.

Flight EK521, which was carrying 282 passengers – including 24 Britons and four Irish nationals – and 18 crew members, was arriving from the southern Indian city of Thiruvananthapuram when the accident happened at about 12.45pm local time.

One firefighter died “battling the blaze” on the plane “while saving the lives of others”, according to the Government of Dubai’s media office.

All passengers and crew were accounted for, the airline said.

Chairman and chief executive Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum told a press conference that 10 people had been admitted to hospital after the incident.

Early indications suggested the plane, a Boeing 777, was not at fault and other factors would have been involved, according to expert David Learmount.

“The images tell us nothing except the aircraft eventually caught fire, but it certainly doesn’t tell us why it did,” he said.

“It was an incredibly hot day, it was very nearly 50 degrees.

“If you get a damaged wing and fuel comes out of it, it vaporises in temperatures like that and vapour is highly inflammable.”

He said temperature was “very likely” to have been a factor and that the crash should not prompt concerns about the safety of the plane.

“There have been accidents where 777s have been very badly damaged during a landing and yet we haven’t had a fire like that,” he said.

Mr Learmount said the crew acted in line with protocol by evacuating all passengers.

“If there is a fire, or a risk of a fire, then the drill for every crew for every aeroplane flight in the world is to get the passengers off very fast, because if you don’t it’s a disaster,” he said.

“Did they do well? No, they did what they were paid for.”

The Boeing 777 departed Thiruvananthapuram at 10.19am and was scheduled to land at 12.50pm local time, according to Emirates.