AFTER DEADLY NEPAL CRASH, BANGLADESHI AIRLINE DEFENDS PILOTS
A Bangladeshi airline said
on Tuesday its two pilots aboard the plane that crashed in Nepal killing 49
people had both received special training to land at Kathmandu airport and had
successfully handled previous flights.
The airline and
airport authorities in Kathmandu have blamed each other in the aftermath of
Monday’s disaster, the Himalayan nation’s worst since the 1992 crash of a
Pakistan International Airlines aircraft killed 167 people.
Flight operator
US-Bangla Airlines said it was too early to blame anyone, after a transcript of
the pilots’ radio conversation with ground control in Kathmandu revealed
confusion over the designated runway.
Captain Abid Sultan
and co-pilot Prithula Rashid died when their plane crashed short of the runway,
broke into pieces and caught fire, officials said.
“Sultan was
experienced, quite familiar with the airfield and the aircraft,” US-Bangla
spokesman Kamrul Islam said. “Rashid was also specially trained to make
landings at the airport. This is mandatory for any pilot to fly over there. She
also made landings at the airport before.”
Investigators have
retrieved the flight data recorder from the wreckage, said Raj Kumar Chettri,
the airport’s general manager, and an investigation had begun into the cause of
the crash.
The Bombardier Q400
series aircraft was carrying 71 people from the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka when
it tried to land in visibility that weather officials said exceeded 6 km (4
miles), with cloud at one end of the runway and a light tailwind of six to
seven knots.
A Nepali army
official said one of the 22 survivors being treated in Kathmandu hospitals was
to be discharged on Tuesday. Families of some of the victims mourned outside
the hospitals.
There were 33 Nepali
passengers, 32 from Bangladesh, one from China and one from the Maldives.
“NO TECHNICAL GLITCHES”
US-Bangla said
Sultan, a former Bangladesh Air Force pilot, had landed more than 100 times at
Kathmandu, where wind shear and bird hits are frequent hazards in the
mountainous region.
Sultan had more than
5,000 hours flying experience and was specially trained to land at the airport,
Islam said.
The airline also
denied a media report that the aircraft had skidded off the runway during a
domestic flight in 2015, saying it “never, ever encountered any accident. It
had no technical glitches.”
Defending the
pilots, airline chief executive Imran Asif cited the transcript of their radio
conversation with ground control in Kathmandu issued by a German air safety
website, JACDEC.
The Civil Aviation
Authority of Nepal did not directly confirm the authenticity of the transcript,
saying publication of such exchanges went against the law.
“We suspect wrong
signals from Kathmandu air traffic control room might have led to the crash,”
Asif told reporters on Monday. “A three-minute conversation between the pilot
and the air traffic control before the landing indicated that they sent a wrong
signal to the pilot.”
Transmissions by the
Kathmandu tower controller show that, despite being cleared to land on runway
02, the flight began deviating from its course.
The captain and the
tower controller discussed which runway the aircraft was aiming for, the
website said. At one point, the controller told the co-pilot she was heading
toward runway 20, although the aircraft had been cleared for runway 02.
Later, the captain
took over the conversation and confirmed the plan to land at runway 02. At one
stage, ground control said runway 20 had also been cleared for landing,
however.
The plane made an
attempt to land on the runway it was originally meant to use.
Chettri said most
international flights are directed to runway 02 but depending on wind
conditions, flights are also requested to use 20.
He said police would
investigate how the conversation between the pilots and control room was
leaked.
FLIGHTS RESUME
On Tuesday, airport
operations returned to normal. The aircraft wreckage lay on ground near the
runway, guarded by security personnel.
“Regardless of what
contributed to this tragic accident, we are sorry,” Asif, the airline’s chief
executive, wrote on networking website LinkedIn. “And we stand by the bereaved
families of those who lost their loved ones.”
On Monday, Kathmandu
airport officials said they had asked the pilots if they faced a problem after
the aircraft changed course in the final descent, but the pilots said they did
not.
The plane was then
seen circling twice in a northeast direction, Chettri said. Traffic controllers
again asked the pilot if things were OK, and he replied, “Yes”.
The tower then told
the pilot his alignment was not correct, but received no reply, Chettri said.
Canadian plane maker
Bombardier said it was sending an
air safety investigator and a field service representative to the site.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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