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Live above: Authorities respond to the Delta Air Lines flight that crashed and landed upside down in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
(NEXSTAR) — At least 15 people, including a child, are injured after a Delta Air Lines flight from Minneapolis experienced an “incident upon landing” in Ontario, Canada.
Videos posted to social media and a live feed from the airport show the flight upside down on the tarmac as people walk away and crews douse the plane. Television news reports say the Delta flight flipped over on landing.
“Delta is aware of reports of Endeavor Flight 4819 operating from Minneapolis/St. Paul to Toronto-Pearson International Airport [was] involved in an incident,” the company said in a statement to Nexstar. “We are working to confirm any details and will share the most current information on news.delta.com as soon as it becomes available.”
The airport confirmed on X that “all passengers and crew are accounted for.”
Paramedics told Nexstar’s NewsNation that 15 people were hurt in the crash.
One of those injured, a pediatric patient, was rushed to The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto with critical injuries, officials with Ornge, an air ambulance and medical transport company, told Nexstar.
Also critically injured in the crash were a man in his 60s and a woman in her 40s, both of whom were rushed to a Toronto trauma center by air ambulance.
No fatalities were reported.
Association of Flight Attendants-CWA said one of its crews was working on the flight.
“Reports are there are no fatalities. Please do not speculate on this incident as everyone works to gather information and support those involved,” the organization said on X.
A statement from the FAA says all 80 people aboard the flight were evacuated. The Transportation Board of Canada is leading the investigation.
Peel Regional Police and Canada’s Transportation Safety Board did not immediately respond to Nexstar’s request for comment.
Toronto Pearson is now showing countless delayed or canceled arrivals and departures throughout the day.
This is the latest in a string of aviation incidents so far this year. In late January, all 67 passengers and crew aboard an American Airlines passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter died when the two collided near Washington, D.C. Six people aboard a Jet Rescue Air Ambulance and one person on the ground were killed when the flight crashed in Philadelphia just days later.
Ten people were killed when the small plane they were traveling in crashed into ice on the Bering Sea in Alaska earlier this month. One person died last week when a private jet owned by Mötley Crüe singer Vince Neil collided with another jet at the Scottsdale Airport in Arizona.
Two pilots were able to eject from the U.S. Navy jet they were flying last week moments before it crashed into the San Diego Bay area. They were quickly pulled from the water by a nearby fishing vessel and taken to a local hospital.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.