A DELTA plane has crashed at a Toronto airport as dramatic images show the jet on its roof after it flipped on the tarmac.<br /><br />Passengers could be seen crawling out of the plane, which was traveling from Minneapolis to Toronto Pearson International Airport in Canada, when it slammed into the runway.<br /><br />Fifteen people were treated for injuries after the terrifying crash, Peel Regional Paramedic Services told The U.S. Sun.<br /><br />Horrifying videos shared on social media show the plane completely upside down on the snowy runway.<br /><br />Smoke surrounded the jet in the aftermath of the terrifying scene.<br /><br />"Toronto Pearson is aware of an incident upon landing involving a Delta Airlines plane arriving from Minneapolis," the airport shared on X just before 3 pm.<br /><br />"Emergency teams are responding. All passengers and crew are accounted for."<br /><br />Paramedics said of the 15 people treated for injuries, two were airlifted to trauma centers for "critical but non-life threatening injuries," officials said.<br /><br />One child was also taken to a pediatric hospital for treatment after the crash.<br /><br />A passenger named John Nelson shared a video from the scary scene on Facebook on Monday.<br /><br />"We just landed," he said in a video showing the Delta aircraft upside down.<br /><br />"Our plane crashed, it's upside down. The fire department is on site.<br /><br />"Most people appear to be okay. We're all getting off, [there's] some smoke going on."<br /><br />The fire department is shown spraying fire retardant on the plane.<br /><br />"Delta is aware of reports of Endeavor Flight 4819 operating from Minneapolis/St. Paul to Toronto-Pearson International Airport as involved in an incident," Delta said in a statement.<br /><br />"We are working to confirm any details and will share the most current information on news.delta.com as soon as it becomes available."<br /><br />According to FlightAware, all arrivals and departures in and out of Toronto Pearson have reportedly been paused.<br /><br />Hours before the crash, the Toronto airport posted a picture on X of the cleared runway after this weekend's snowy weather.<br /><br />"Here's a look at part of our airfield this morning as the clean-up continues from this weekend's storm," the airport shared.<br /><br />"Our crews worked all weekend to keep the roughly 5 million square meters of airfield clear of snow to keep planes arriving and departing safely."<br /><br />This is the latest in a series of plane disasters in the past few weeks, including a midair collision between a passenger plane and a military helicopter that killed 67 people on January 29.<br /><br />Officials revealed last week that bad radio transmission might have caused the devastating crash, which sent the two aircraft plunging into the Potomac River in Washington DC.<br /><br />Crews spent days combing through the icy waters in a tragic recovery mission as they pulled bodies from the river and identified the victims.
