Only two of the passengers were injured in the crash of a Delta Air Lines plane in Toronto, the airport CEO said Tuesday.
All 80 people on the plane made it from the living state of a collision landing when a flight from Minneapolis to Toronto hit the ground at the airport and turned upside down.
Seventeen people, including children, were injured when crashed, and the cause of the incident remains under investigation.
Deborah Flint, CEO of the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, said at a press conference Tuesday that 19 of the 21 people who fell crashes had been released by the hospital. She did not provide details about the two remaining hospitalized people, The Associated Press reported.
Aviation experts said it was a “miracle” to say that everyone on the plane survived and crashed, but that some things have been right, including the plane's wings.
Investigators will investigate what happened and how strong winds have affected the crash landing.
This is the latest in a series of air accidents in North America, from the most deadly crash in over 20 years when an American Airlines flight collided with a Black Hawk military helicopter into the air, killing nearly 70 people. It's beginning.





