A major accident was averted after a turboprop passenger aircraft of Buddha Air carrying 55 people veered off the runway while landing at an airport in Nepal’s Bhadrapur, officials said.
According to the airline, all passengers and crew onboard escaped unhurt, though the incident triggered panic moments after touchdown.
The plane carried 51 passengers and four crew members. It came to Bhadrapur from the capital Kathmandu.
#FlightAlert
काठमाडौंबाट भद्रपुर उडान संख्या 901 जहाज 9N-AMF भद्रपुर विमानस्थलमा अवतरणका क्रममा रनवेबाट बाहिरिएको छ । सो जहाजमा 51 जना यात्रु रहेका थिए । यात्रु एवं चालक दल [४ जना] सबैजना सुरक्षित रहेका छन् ।काठमाडौंबाट अर्को जहाजमा टेक्निकल एवं रिलिफ टिम पठाउन लागिएको छ ।
— Buddha Air (@AirBuddha) January 2, 2026
The flight No.
9N-AMF shows on trackers as an ATR 72-500 turboprop passenger aircraft.
The airline said technical and relief teams have been dispatched from Kathmandu.
🇳🇵🛬 Jhapa, Nepal: Buddha Air confirmed that its ATR aircraft operating from Kathmandu veered off the runway while landing at Bhadrapur Airport in Nepal.
⚠️ All 51 passengers and 4 crew members are safe. pic.twitter.com/RNCVzkoXII
— All-AM (@Namaste_NP) January 3, 2026
“The flight number 901 from Kathmandu to Bhadrapur, aircraft 9N-AMF, has veered off the runway while landing at Bhadrapur Airport. There were 51 passengers on board the aircraft. All passengers and crew [4 persons] are safe. A technical and relief team is being dispatched from Kathmandu on another aircraft,” the airline posted on X.
The aircraft overshot the runway by around 200 metres, coming to a halt near a rivulet and sustaining minor damage in the incident.
In a post on X, the Nepal Police said that on 2082.09.18 (January 2, 2026), a Buddha Air flight carrying 51 passengers and four crew members from Kathmandu to Bhadrapur Airport in Jhapa district met with an accident during the landing process. All passengers and crew were safely rescued by Nepal Police along with other concerned authorities, and no casualties were reported.
Nepal aviation’s safety record has often come under scrutiny. In July 2024, a Bombardier CRJ200LR of Saurya Airlines crashed after taking off from Kathmandu, killing 18 out of the 19 on board.
In January 2023, a Yeti Airlines ATR 72 crashed while landing at Pokhara, killing all 68 passengers and four crew members onboard. Investigators later found that the pilot had accidentally feathered the engines—adjusting the propeller blades in a way that eliminated thrust—moments before the crash.
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