
Kathmandu, Nepal: A Turkish Airlines Airbus A330 operating flight TK726 from Istanbul to Kathmandu suffered a tyre fire during landing at Nepal’s Tribhuvan International Airport on Monday morning, triggering an emergency evacuation and temporarily shutting down the country’s busiest airport.
According to Nepal’s Civil Aviation Authority, the incident occurred shortly after the aircraft touched down at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu. Airport officials said flames and smoke were seen emerging from the aircraft’s right rear landing gear area moments after landing. Emergency response teams stationed at the airport immediately rushed to the runway and brought the situation under control within a short period.
The aircraft involved was an Airbus A330 arriving from Istanbul with 278 passengers and 11 crew members onboard, taking the total number of occupants to 289. All passengers and crew were safely evacuated through emergency exits, and no injuries were reported during the evacuation process.
Gyanendra Bhul, spokesperson for the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, told Reuters that the fire originated in the aircraft’s right rear tyre after landing. Officials confirmed that firefighters quickly extinguished the blaze before the aircraft was towed away from the runway to a taxiway area, where it remained grounded for technical inspections.
The incident forced authorities to suspend airport operations for nearly an hour because Tribhuvan International Airport operates with a single runway. Several incoming flights were reportedly placed on hold or delayed while emergency teams cleared the runway and investigators initiated preliminary assessments.
Nepal’s aviation sector continues to face operational challenges due to mountainous terrain, rapidly changing weather conditions and difficult approach procedures into Kathmandu Valley. A previous incident in 2015 involved a Turkish Airlines aircraft, when another Airbus A330 skidded off the runway at Kathmandu during dense fog conditions. No injuries were reported in that earlier occurrence either.
Turkish Airlines had not officially issued a detailed statement regarding the exact technical cause of the tyre fire. Aviation authorities in Nepal are expected to conduct a technical investigation into the incident, including inspections of the landing gear and braking systems.
The latest Kathmandu incident comes months after another operational issue involving a Turkish Airlines Airbus A330 in February 2026, when flight THY727 operating from Kathmandu to Istanbul reportedly diverted to Kolkata after the aircraft’s right engine developed a fire indication shortly after takeoff. That flight landed safely with all 236 people onboard, and authorities later launched an investigation into the engine-related emergency.



















