2 United Airlines Jets Clip Wings at San Francisco Airport

2 United Airlines Jets Clip Wings at San Francisco Airport

A jet from United Airlines Boeing 777 cut the wing of another United plane that was pushing from the door early Tuesday morning at the San Francisco International Airport, which caused the cancellation of two trans-patrifies that, Beeny Saide, said Beait, Sabeait Moremem.

No one was injured in the accident, the last incident to bring scrutiny to commercial aviation security procedures in the United States.

The brush between the two aircraft occurred around 12:35 am, according to the Federal Aviation Administration, which said that the airplanes were maneuvering in an area where air traffic drivers do not communicate with flight crews.

As one of the Boeing 777 left the door to fly to Sydney, Australia, its right wing increased the left wing of a flight that went to Hong Kong, the FAA said in a statement. A video that seemed to have leg tasks from inside one of the airport terminals showed the workers stopped in a hydraulic elevator that inspected the point where the two wings cut.

An airport spokesman sent questions about the incident to United Airlines.

There were 202 people and 16 crew members on the flight to Sydney, while the plane to Hong Kong had 306 passengers and 16 crew members, according to the airline. United did not say what kind of damage the planes had suffered or what they had taken to the accident.

United said he was working to reserve passengers on other flights.

The defect occurred at a time of greater anxiety for commercial aviation in the United States, after other accidents, interruptions and flight route problems and a week after the letter of air traffic drivers lost communication with airplanes. Newark communications breakdown caused hundreds of delays and cancellations, in addition to flight deviations. United said last week that he was reducing his daily flight schedule in Newark, citing a shortage of air traffic controllers.

Last month, two American Airlines airplanes, including one that has at least six members of the New York Congress and New Jersey, cut wings on a shooting street at Ronald Reagan National Airport outside Washington.

No one was injured in that incident, but brought a new scrutiny to a safe place at the airport, where a regional American Airlines jet made its final approach for an army helicopter in Jan. 29, killing the 67 people aboard the two planes. That accident was the deadliest in the United States in 20 years.

On Thursday, air traffic controllers instructed two commercial flights to abort lands at Reagan airport because a US army helicopter was preparing to land near the Pentagon, said the FAA, which was investigating.

Shortly after those aborted flights, the army said it was suspending training flights around the Pentagon, Reuters reported.