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Truck collides with Saudia Boeing 787-9 at Heathrow causing significant damage

Truck collides with Saudia Boeing 787-9 at Heathrow causing significant damage
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Saudia Boeing 787-9 | Official Website

A Saudia Boeing 787-9 aircraft was involved in an incident at London Heathrow Airport when a ground services truck collided with it, penetrating the fuselage. The widebody jet, registered as HZ-ARF, had landed after completing flight SV105 from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The collision occurred on May 28 and resulted in the cancellation of the return flight SV106 to Saudi Arabia.

Photos shared on social media depicted significant damage to the aft fuselage of the aircraft caused by metal railings mounted on the truck. Flightradar24 data showed that HZ-ARF landed at 14:47 local time (UTC +1), having departed Jeddah King Abdulaziz International Airport at 10:39 local time (UTC +3).

In response to the canceled flight, UK regulations require airlines to provide affected passengers with sustenance, communication means, accommodation, and transportation until they can be flown to their destination. "The airline must provide you with these items until it is able to fly you to your destination, no matter how long the delay lasts or what has caused it," stated a representative from the UK Civil Aviation Authority.

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The Saudia aircraft was scheduled for departure from London-Heathrow at 17:45 on flight SV106 back to Jeddah but will now need repairs before returning to service. It may utilize British Airways' maintenance facilities at Heathrow for necessary repairs.

This incident follows a similar occurrence involving Air New Zealand's Boeing 777-300ER which sustained damage due to a jet bridge impact in Brisbane. That aircraft flew under reduced altitude conditions back to Auckland for repairs.

Data from Cirium’s Diio Mi airline planning tool revealed that flight SV106 was one of three Saudia departures from London-Heathrow bound for Jeddah on May 28. Other flights included SV120 and SV118 scheduled later that day.

British Airways and Virgin Atlantic also operated flights from London-Heathrow to Saudi Arabia on May 28; however, their destinations were Riyadh King Khalid International Airport rather than Jeddah. Virgin Atlantic recently commenced its service to Riyadh as part of expanding operations aligned with Saudi Vision 2030.

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