MANILA, Philippines - Australian researchers on Saturday started investigating a Qantas jumbo jet which had to formulate an urgent landing after a vast hole opened on its fuselage, a Philippine aviation member said.

The Boeing 747-400 was flying at 29,000 feet with 346 passengers Friday when it was trembled through a drastic knock .The plane descended swiftly before landing carefully minutes later at the Manila airport.

There were no damages in the passengers and troop, but few of the passengers suffered from vomiting and extreme nausea condition.

Ruben Ciron, chief of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines, elucidated four experts from the Australian Transport Safety Bureau was yet investigating the airliner to make out what caused the demolition.

Qantas Chief Executive Officer Geoff Dixon said reporters Saturday he was get “panic” while seeing at the scenes of wide open hole. He said it was too early to conjecture on what led towards the damage.

“There are several aircrafts flying these all around the global village, things occur. Something has happened here and we cannot speculate any more about what did happen,” Dixon said.

The travelers on Flight QF 30, on the way to Melbourne from London, had merely been served a meal after a halt in Hong Kong when they listen to a loud bang, then their ears exploded as air rushed out the hole.

After getting off, they saw a gaping 9-foot thick hole at the joint where the head of the right wing connects to the plane. Baggage from the cargo retain stressed against the webbing used to maintain it from changing during a flight.

The travelers boarded another Qantas plane to Melbourne before midnight on Friday.

An official of the United States Transportation Security Administration said preliminary reports showed no connection towards the tourism.

Peter Gibson, spokesman for Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority, expressed gossip that Rust took towards the incident could be discounted.

“It’s without a doubt an enormously exceptional and curious event that a hole opens up in the fuselage,” he said to reporters in Australia. “I know there are a lot of stories around there, but they’re merely at a point, they’re merely stories. We don’t have the exact facts and information”.

Quoting pilot John Francis Bartels, the Manila International Airport Authority, highlighted a point that the earlier inquiry presented the airplane suffered from volatile decompression.

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