<p>Qantas passenger jet which took off from Auckland made an emergency landing after it experienced a fuel leak and reported engine trouble, according to Herald Sun newspaper.<br /><br />The Qantas plane, with 130 passengers aboard, landed safely after requesting "priority landing".<br /><br />"QF50 from Auckland to Sydney landed safely and without incident at Sydney Airport after requesting priority landing," the airline announced in a tweet.</p>.<p>It was the latest in a series of recent incidents involving Australia's national airline. Last month a probe was launched after a fire broke out in the cockpit of a Qantas plane, forcing it to land at Cairns in far north Queensland.<br /><br />Qantas said an electrical fault caused the fire on a flight from the Philippines to Sydney on March 23.<br /><br />Last year, Qantas grounded its six-strong A380 fleet, which all use Rolls-Royce engines, after the mid-air incident on the Singapore to Sydney Flight QF34 in November.<br /><br />The plane with more than 450 people on board was forced to make an emergency landing at Singapore, trailing smoke from a blackened engine.<br /><br />Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce appeared to blame the engine, made by Rolls-Royce.</p>
<p>Qantas passenger jet which took off from Auckland made an emergency landing after it experienced a fuel leak and reported engine trouble, according to Herald Sun newspaper.<br /><br />The Qantas plane, with 130 passengers aboard, landed safely after requesting "priority landing".<br /><br />"QF50 from Auckland to Sydney landed safely and without incident at Sydney Airport after requesting priority landing," the airline announced in a tweet.</p>.<p>It was the latest in a series of recent incidents involving Australia's national airline. Last month a probe was launched after a fire broke out in the cockpit of a Qantas plane, forcing it to land at Cairns in far north Queensland.<br /><br />Qantas said an electrical fault caused the fire on a flight from the Philippines to Sydney on March 23.<br /><br />Last year, Qantas grounded its six-strong A380 fleet, which all use Rolls-Royce engines, after the mid-air incident on the Singapore to Sydney Flight QF34 in November.<br /><br />The plane with more than 450 people on board was forced to make an emergency landing at Singapore, trailing smoke from a blackened engine.<br /><br />Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce appeared to blame the engine, made by Rolls-Royce.</p>