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Metal shards from Boeing 787 taking off over Rome rain down ‘like bullets’ on people below

Norwegian Dreamliner heading to Los Angeles started shedding eight-inch metal fragments - which smashed into homes and cars below

Colin Drury
Monday 12 August 2019 10:42 EDT
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Metal shards from Boeing 787 taking off over Rome rain down ‘like bullets’ on people below

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Plane debris rained down “like bullets” when metal fragments fell off a Boeing 787 Dreamliner shortly after take-off in Rome.

People living under the aircraft’s flight path were pounded by hundreds of eight-inch chunks as the Norwegian jet departed the city’s Leonardo da Vinci–Fiumicino Airport on Saturday.

“It was a storm of steel and iron,” one resident told the Il Messaggero newspaper. “I screamed and ran into the house.”

Dozens of cars and homes in the Isola Sacra area south of the city were damaged. One person reported suffering minor burns.

A witness said: “They were like bullets. My shirt was on fire.”

An air investigation has now been launched into the incident, which saw the plane abandon its planned flight to Los Angeles and instead, after circling twice over the Tyrrhenian Sea, return to Rome.

It is thought the debris fell from the plane’s left engine – although the extent of the problems or how at risk the 298 passengers on board were has not yet been disclosed.

A spokeswoman for Norwegian said simply that there had been “indications of a technical failure”, but added that the aircraft landed safely.

Writing on Facebook, Esterino Montino, the mayor of Fiumicino, said: “Around 4.40pm on Saturday, an aircraft taking off from the Leonardo da Vinci airport suffered a breakdown and had to return.

“During the breakdown, however, it lost metal pieces that fell at great speed to the ground.

“When falling, these fragments hit parked cars, garden sheds and other objects, damaging them."

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Police, firefighters and civil protection officers all had to be rushed to the site, he added.

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