DEADLY BLAST

Mystery over Japan Airlines plane disaster that killed 5 in runway crash deepens as bombshell audio reveals vital clues

Reports suggest the coastguard aircraft wasn't cleared to enter the runway

A JAPAN Airlines plane was cleared to land moments before it smashed into a coastguard aircraft leaving five dead, air traffic control recordings reveal.

Shocking footage showed the passenger plane erupt in flames after it collided with a Japanese coastguard aircraft on a runway at Tokyo's Haneda Airport on Tuesday.

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The charred wreckage of the Japan Airlines plane at Haneda airportCredit: AP
The Japan Airlines' flight erupted in flames soon after landingCredit: AFP
A firefighter investigates the debris of the Airbus A350 at Haneda AirportCredit: Getty
The wreckage of the Japan coastguard aircraft where five people were killedCredit: AFP
The Japan Airlines plane collided with the smaller coastguard aircraft and burst into flamesCredit: AFP

All 367 passengers and 12 crew members on board managed to flee the burning wreckage of the Japan Airlines aircraft.

But five passengers onboard the coastguard's De Havilland Dash-8 died in the horror - with the captain said to be in a critical condition.

Air traffic control recordings have now heaped more mystery on the catastrophic disaster.

While the Japan Airlines plane had been given permission to land, the coastguard aircraft had been told to stop short of the runway, Japanese broadcaster , citing a source.

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But a coastguard source said its pilot received the green light to take off, the outlet said - contradicting the controller's account of events.

According to recordings, Japan Airlines was told to continue its approach to runway 34R at 17.43pm local time, and was given clearance to land at 17.45pm - two minutes before the collision occurred.

"Clear to land 34R Japan Airlines 516," a controller can be heard saying in a recording.

In a recording from Haneda’s control tower apparently taken in the moments before the collision, a voice can be heard telling JAL’s flight to "continue approach".

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Japan Airlines said the aircraft recognised and repeated the landing permission from air traffic control before approaching and touching down.

Asked at a briefing on Tuesday whether the flight secured permission to land, the airline said: "Our understanding is that it was given."

But the coastguard has declined to comment on the circumstances surrounding the crash - including whether the aircraft was stationary or moving when disaster struck.

Former Australian air traffic controller Michelle Robson suggested the coastguard aircraft wasn't cleared to enter the runway before the crash.

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