Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Veteran Test Pilot Suspects Human Error Caused A320 Plane's Crash

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Veteran Test Pilot Suspects Human Error Caused A320 Plane's Crash

    VETERAN TEST PILOT SUSPECTS HUMAN ERROR CAUSED A320 PLANE'S CRASH

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    May 3, 2006 Wednesday

    Russia's veteran test pilot, Magomed Tolboyev, has said he tends to
    suspect the role of a human error as the chief factor that led to
    last night's crash of an Armenian airliner near the Russian Black
    Sea resort city of Sochi.

    Tolboyev, currently the president of the Aviatsia aviation corporation,
    has said, the planes of this type have what he described as the "curved
    image problem," and the crew might have lost their bearings. At the
    same time Tolboyev did not rule out mistakes by both crew and air
    traffic controllers.

    Interviewed live on the Ekho Moskvy radio station, Tolboyev said
    that the plane's equipment allowed for making a landing in extremely
    bad weather.

    Air engineer, expert in civil aviation and flight safety Alexei
    Komarov, who edits the Aviatransportnoye Obozreniye review, said that
    according to statistics, A320 was a very reliable plane. Of the more
    than 2,500 liners of this type in operation around the world a mere
    twelve have suffered crashes.

    The governor of the Krasnodar Region, Alexander Tkachev, tends to
    share the human factor version, although in his opinion it is a
    preliminary one and requires further confirmation.

    The Russian Emergency Situations Ministry has blamed the Armenian
    plane's crash on bad weather. The Transport Ministry says this version
    is most likely.

    The Russian Prosecutor General's Office has ruled out a terrorist
    attack. Public Relations Officer Nataliya Vishnyakova has said with
    reliance to the investigators' early findings "a terrorist attack
    should be ruled out, because there is no objective evidence pointing
    to this."

    There where 113 passengers and crew on board the crashed plane.

    According to the Russian Foreign Ministry 26 of them had Russian
    citizenship. There were some Georgian citizens on board, too. Also
    on that plane was Armenia's former interior minister, chief of the
    KGB security service Major-General Usik Arutyunian.

    According to the latest reports, the bodies of 46 victims have been
    recovered and brought to Sochi. Two have been identified.
Working...
X