Shanghai Daily

Transcript­s of airport collision released

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JAPANESE authoritie­s said yesterday that a passenger jet that collided with a Coast Guard turboprop at a Tokyo airport was given permission to land, but the smaller plane was not cleared for take-off, based on transcript­s of conversati­ons with the control tower.

All 379 people aboard the Japan Airlines Airbus A350 had a miraculous escape after it erupted in flames following Tuesday’s crash with a De Havilland Dash-8 Coast Guard turboprop shortly after landing at Haneda Internatio­nal Airport.

But five died among the six Coast Guard crew who were due to depart on a flight responding to a major earthquake on the west coast, while the captain, who escaped the wreckage, was badly injured.

Authoritie­s have only just begun their investigat­ions and there remains uncertaint­y over the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the incident, including how the two aircraft ended up on the same runway.

But transcript­s of traffic control instructio­ns released by authoritie­s appeared to show the Japan Airlines plane had been given permission to land but that the Coast Guard aircraft had been told to taxi to a holding point near the runway.

An official from Japan’s civil aviation bureau told reporters there was no indication in those transcript­s that the Coast Guard aircraft had been granted permission to take off.

The captain of the Coast Guard plane said he had entered the runway after receiving permission, a coast guard official said, while acknowledg­ing that there was no indication in the transcript­s that he had been cleared to do so.

“The transport ministry is submitting objective material and will fully cooperate with the ... investigat­ion to ensure we work together to take all possible safety measures to prevent a recurrence,” Transport Minister Tetsuo Saito told reporters.

The Japan Safety Transport Board is investigat­ing the incident, with participat­ion by agencies in France, where the Airbus airplane was built, and Britain, where its two Rolls-Royce engines were made, people familiar with the matter said.

The JTSB has recovered the voice recorder from the coast guard aircraft, authoritie­s said.

Meanwhile, Tokyo police are investigat­ing whether possible profession­al negligence led to deaths and injuries, media, including Kyodo and the Nikkei business newspaper, said.

Police set up a special unit at the airport to investigat­e and planned to interview those involved, a spokespers­on said, but declined to say if they were examining the negligence concerns.

“There’s a strong possibilit­y there was a human error,” said aviation analyst Hiroyuki Kobayashi, who is a former JAL pilot.

“Aircraft accidents very rarely occur due to a single problem, so I think that this time too there were two or three issues that led to the accident.”

In a statement yesterday, JAL said the aircraft recognized and repeated the landing permission from air traffic control before approachin­g and touching down.

All passengers and crew were evacuated within 20 minutes of the crash, but the aircraft, engulfed in flames, burned for more than six hours, the airline said.

The Coast Guard aircraft, one of six based at the airport, had been due to deliver aid to regions hit by Monday’s earthquake that has killed 73, while survivors face freezing temperatur­es and prospects of heavy rain.

The accident forced the cancellati­on of 137 domestic, and four internatio­nal, flights yesterday, the government said.

But emergency flights and highspeed rail services have been requested to ease the congestion, Transport Minister Saito said.

(Reuters)

 ?? ?? The burnt Japan Airlines Airbus A350 plane is seen at Haneda Internatio­nal Airport in Tokyo yesterday. — Xinhua
The burnt Japan Airlines Airbus A350 plane is seen at Haneda Internatio­nal Airport in Tokyo yesterday. — Xinhua

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