[video=youtube;IJ7rfc1sQE8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJ7rfc1sQE8[/video]
Lots of photos in the link above.
Lots of photos in the link above.
By Anthony Bond and Richard Shears
PUBLISHED: 03:45 EST, 13 April 2013 | UPDATED: 11:49 EST, 13 April 2013
More than 100 passengers had a miracle escape today after a plane crashed into the sea as it attempted to land off the coast of Bali.
Eyewitnesses said passengers fearing for their lives screamed in panic as the Lion Air jet fell short of the runway at Ngurah Rai Airport, near Denparsar.
The aircraft, carrying 101 passengers and seven crew members, smashed into the sea prompting a huge rescue effort.
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Many of the passengers escaped through emergency doors which opened half way along the fuselage and made their way to the shore in inflatable yellow dinghies.
After being evacuated off the plane, they were taken to the airport terminal for treatment.
Airport officials said that several people were injured in the crash, but the extent of their injuries were not known.
Lion Air is currently banned from flying with the European Union because of concerns over its safety levels.
Pictures from the scene show the passenger jet with its distinctive red Lion name on the side lying partially submerged in the water near rocks at the end of the runway.
The plane had broken its back - the rear section drooped further into the water and a large split could be seen in the last portion of the jet.
Other passengers milled about at the airport as police and officials attempted to establish what had happened to cause the jet to crash into the sea.
Bali Police Chief Arif Wahyunadi said: 'All passengers and crew have been taken off the aircraft as it lies in the sea.
'They are being attended to at the airport.'
Up to 45 people were taken to several different hospitals for treatment.
I Made Krisna Maharta, an official with Bali's search and rescue agency, said all of the passengers and crew were safely rescued. He said initial reports showed there were 101 passengers and seven crew members aboard the plane.
Mr Wahyunadi said the jet had originated in the city of Bandung, Indonesia's third largest city - a tourist attraction because of its ancient architecture.