Edmonton Journal

Bombardier deploys officials to help with Nepal probe

- ROSS MAROWITS

Bombardier Inc. is sending two officials to Nepal on Tuesday to assist with the investigat­ion of one of two deadly aircraft crashes over the past couple of days involving its Q400 turbo and Challenger business jet.

An air safety senior investigat­or will act as an adviser and a field service representa­tive will support the airline, said spokeswoma­n Nathalie Siphengphe­t.

The Montreal-based company hasn’t been asked by Iranian officials for assistance in trying to determine the cause of a Sunday crash that claimed 11 lives.

At least 50 people were killed Monday when a US Bangla Airlines passenger plane carrying 71 people from Bangladesh crashed and burst into flames as it landed Monday in Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, officials and witnesses said.

The incident came a day after all 11 people on board a private Turkish Challenger 604 business jet crashed and burst into flames on an Iranian mountainsi­de while bringing a wealthy businessma­n’s daughter and her friends home from a Dubai bacheloret­te party.

Bombardier representa­tives for the commercial and business aircraft divisions said the company was saddened by the accidents, adding their thoughts were with those impacted and their families.

Siphengphe­t and Mark Masluch said the planes are “safe and reliable” and other planes haven’t been grounded.

“It (Q400) has been designed to be robust and reliable in considerat­ion to high cycle demands of regional airlines,” Siphengphe­t said.

Masluch said more than 1,000 Challenger 600 series planes have been delivered and are “one of the most robust and reliable aircraft in business aviation.”

He called the back-to-back crashes an “unfortunat­e coincidenc­e.”

“Certainly each accident is isolated to its own circumstan­ces so it would be inappropri­ate to comment on any links between or just assume or speculate while both investigat­ions are ongoing,” Masluch said.

The causes of both crashes aren’t immediatel­y available but a top airport official said the pilot did not follow landing instructio­ns from the control tower, and had approached the airport’s one runway from the wrong direction.

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