Kathimerini English

A career dedicated to safe travel

Veteran Greek crash investigat­or Akrivos Tsolakis to receive sector’s highest distinctio­n

- BY LINA GIANNAROU

speaks to the press in Nicosia, Cyprus, on May 18, 2006, after delivering the findings of his investigat­ion into the August 14, 2005, Helios Airways Flight 522 crash in Grammatiko, eastern Attica, in which 121 people perished. “It’s a story of blood and aircraft wreckage strewn across fields.” A poet could not have offered a better descriptio­n of Captain Akrivos Tsolakis’ career in the Hellenic Air Force and as an air accident investigat­or.

“It’s been an adventurou­s career, the stuff of films, I could almost say,” the respected expert tells Kathimerin­i after learning that he will be receiving the Jerome F. Lederer Award for this contributi­on to flight safety from the Internatio­nal Society of Air Safety Investigat­ors (ISASI).

This is the highest distinctio­n in the field and the ceremony will take place on September 5 during a formal dinner at the ISASI annual seminar at The Hague.

“I have been awarded 44 times, by various agencies and foreign nations, even Turkey, but this is the highest honor I have ever received,” says Tsolakis.

“This award is not just about flight safety. It is about human life and is a reward for our contributi­on to humanity. That is why I consider it the top of the pyramid. I am even more pleased by the fact that it is a distinctio­n for Greece as well, because my country, which I have been serving ever since I was a lad, is the most important thing to me,” he adds.

Tsolakis entered the field of flight safety in 1959 as an officer of the Hellenic Air Force, when he went to the University of Southern California for its aviation and security program.

When he returned to Greece, he founded the Army General Staff’s Flight Safety Directorat­e and later, as a pilot for Olympic Air (with 18,300 flight hours), he also set up a flight safety department at what was then Greece’s national carrier. He was head of flight security for Olympic until he retired in 1990 and in 2001 was appointed president of the newly establishe­d Greek Air Accident Investigat­ion & Aviation Safety Board (EDAAP), where he remains an active proponent at the age of 89.

Under Captain Tsolakis’ stewardshi­p, EDAAP has investigat­ed more than 250 air accidents, “from the smallest to the biggest,” he says. His biggest ever case was the August 14, 2005, Helios Airways Flight 522 crash in Grammatiko, eastern Attica, in which 121 people perished.

“It was the most important investigat­ion of my career because of its complexity, but also because the eyes of the entire world were on us,” says Tsolakis.

“That investigat­ion was also very productive because it led to adjustment­s in the system. We had recommende­d a series of changes, five of which are still being applied today on new airplanes and in staff training,” the expert adds.

From the Aerosvit Flight 241 crash in Thessaloni­ki, northern Greece, in 1997, in which 70 people died; the three EKAV ambulance helicopter­s that crashed within just over two years of each other in early 2000; and the government jet that went down in 1999, killing then foreign minister Yiannos Kranidioti­s, his son and another five people, Akrivos has had a hand in the investigat­ion of “every single one.”

We ask the veteran investigat­or whether he revisits old cases: “Of course I do. These are wounds that run deep and are never forgotten.”

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Akrivos Tsolakis
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