1 THE UNIVERSITY DIAY KANSAN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2007 NEWS 11A INTERNATIONAL At least 88 killed in plane crash THAI rescuers carry an injured passenger, center bottom, out of the wreckage of a crashed plane at Phuket International Airport on Sunday in Phuket, Thailand. A passenger plane filled with foreign tourists crashed Sunday in heavy rain on Thailand's tourist island of Phuket, leaving at least 88 people dead and 42 hospitalized, officials said. ASSOCIATED PRESS Budget plane crashes in Thailand; several passengers burned alive BY AUDRA ANG Associated Press PHUKET, Thailand — A plane carrying foreign tourists crashed Sunday as it tried to land in stormy weather on the resort island of Phuket, engulfing some passengers in flames and forcing others to kick out windows to escape the smoke-filled cabin. At least 88 people were killed. One-Two-Go The budget Airlines flight was carrying 123 passengers and seven crew members from the capital Bangkok to Phuket when the plane skidded off the runway in driving wind and rain, officials said. It then ran through a low waterline well and A passenger in front of her caught fire, while one behind her kicked out a plane window. retaining wall and split in two. It was not clear how many of the 78 foreigners on board died, but they included tourists from France, Germany, Israel, Australia and Britain, said the deputy governor of Phuket province, Worapot Ratthaseema. The government issued a list of 30 foreigners who survived. Survivors described their escape amid chaos, smoke and fire. About 60 bodies were retrieved "I stepped over them on the way out of the plane. I was afraid that the airplane was going to explode, so I ran away." "As soon as we hit, everything went dark and everything fell," said Mildred Furlong, 23, a waitress from British Columbia, Canada. PARINWIT CHUSAENG Survivor The plane started filling with smoke, and fires broke out, she said. quickly, but it took hours to get the other bodies out. Parts of the twisted plane lay smoking at the side of the runway, while officials wearing masks carried bodies wrapped in white sheets to an airport storage building. Survivors said the plane landed hard and was out of control. "Our plane was landing, you can tell it was in trouble because it kind of landed then came up again the second time," said John Gerard O'Donnell of Ireland, speaking from his hospital bed: "I came out on the wing of the plane, and the exit door was kind of crushed and I had to squeeze through. And saw my friend; he was outside. He just got out before me. And next thing, it really caught fire. Then I just got badly burned, my face, my legs, my arms." Parinwit Chusaeng, who was slightly burned, said some passengers were engulfed in flames. "I stepped over them on the way out of the plane," Parinwit told The Nation TV channel. "I was afraid that the airplane was going to explode, so I ran away." Piyanooch Ananapakdee, a coordinator at Bangkok Phuket Hospital, said some survivors told her that passengers stepped on each other as they fled the smoke-filled plane. She said there were five people had broken legs and similar injuries from jumping from the aircraft, she said. Dr. Charnsilp Wacharajira said some of the victims were killed by traumatic injuries to the head, not burns from the fire, indicating they died from the impact of the crash. Officials said it was too early to say what caused the crash, but weather was likely a factor. "The visibility was poor as the pilot attempted to land. He decided to make a go-around (make another landing attempt) but the plane lost balance and crashed," said Chaiasik Angsuwan, director general of the in critical condition at her hospital, including a British woman with burns over 60 percent of her body and another person with broken ribs. Many of the injured also Air Transport Authority of Thailand. "It was torn into two parts." CHAISAK ANGSUWAN Air Transport Authority Many of the passengers had been planning to vacation at Phuket, an island popular with Thai and foreign tourists for its pristine beaches. It was among the areas hit hardest by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which killed more than 8,000 people on the island. Swipe 'n' go with Beak Em Bucks! Use your KU card as your ATM & debit card with a Commerce bank account Experience the Convenience: *photocopies - laundry *campus food;coffee; convenience stores *printing - Off-campus merchant locations Visit BEAKEMBUCKS.com to learn about the rewards program! Sunday's plane crash was Thailand's deadliest since December 1998, when 101 people were killed in a Thai Airways crash at Surat Thani, 330 miles south of Bangkok. Forty-five people survived. The accident was likely to raise new questions about the safety of budget airlines in Southeast Asia, which have experienced rapid growth in recent years. None of Thailand's budget airlines had previously suffered a major accident, but there have been several deadly crashes in Indonesia. the sea off the Indonesian coast on New Year's Day, killing 102 people. In 2004, a MD-82 operated by Indonesian carrier carrier Lion Air skidded off the runway in heavy rain at Solo Airport in Central Java and crashed, killing 26 people. Many budget airlines use older planes that have been leased or purchased after years of use by other airlines. 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