Friday, November 22, 2024

‘Embarrassing’ mishap causes New Zealand PM’s plane to break down on way to Japan

Must read

The New Zealand defence force plane flying the country’s prime minister suffered an “embarrassing” mishap after it broke down on the way to Japan. 

Christopher Luxon was forced to take a commercial flight from Papua New Guinea after the Boeing 757 broke down during a refuelling stop.

The rest of the delegation, which reportedly included trade minister Todd McClay, dozens of business leaders and journalists were left stranded in the capital, Port Moresby.

Air New Zealand chief executive Greg Foran, who was one of the stranded 52 business leaders and reporters, decided to divert an Auckland to Tokyo flight via Brisbane to pick everyone up, Sky News Australia reported.

Plane named ‘old Betty’ suffered ‘fuse issue’

A “fuse issue” was reported as the cause of the problem, according to Sky News Australia, and meant the plane – known as “old Betty” – could only fly short distances.

The New Zealand leader is expected to spend four days in Japan where he will meet with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and promote business in his country.

The defence force’s two 757s are more than 30 years old, making them increasingly unreliable.

Read more from Sky News:
Handguns hidden in children’s underwear drawer
Sir Rod Stewart ‘booed’ by German crowd
Palestinians gather at ruined mosque for Eid al Adha prayers

Issue branded ’embarrassing’

Defence minister Judith Collins told radio station Newstalk ZB on Monday the consistent flight issues were “embarrassing” and the ministry was looking at flying Mr Luxon and his delegation commercially from now on.


Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Back in March, a technical hitch to the aircraft landing gear system meant Mr Luxon was forced to take a commercial flight to attend an ASEAN summit in Melbourne.

New Zealand’s defence force is struggling with ageing equipment and retaining sufficient personnel.

The government has said it would like to spend more on defence but is also trying to reduce spending as the country faces economic headwinds.

Latest article