The Borneo Post

Colombia confirms crashed plane was out of fuel

-

BOGOTA: Preliminar­y investigat­ions have confirmed that a plane that crashed in the Colombian mountains last month killing 71 people including most of a Brazilian football team was out of fuel, officials said Monday.

The LaMia airlines charter flight crashed just outside Medellin on November 28, virtually wiping out the Chapecoens­e Real football club as they travelled to the biggest match in their history.

Freddy Bonilla, the head of Colombia’s civil aviation authority, said investigat­ions indicated the British Aerospace 146 jet had run out of fuel.

That has been the leading theory on the crash ever since a harrowing recording emerged of the pilot radioing the control tower to report a fuel emergency.

The pilots “were aware of the fuel limitation­s they had at the time. It was neither adequate nor sufficient,” Bonilla told a press conference.

However, they did not sound the alarm until several minutes before the crash, he said.

The plane was overweight by about 500 kilogramme­s, but that did not appear to have played a “decisive” role, he added.

According to the civil aviation authority, the pilots requested priority to land at 9.49pm ( 0249 GMT) because of a fuel problem. They then began their descent before receiving authorisat­ion.

At 9.53pm, one of their engines stopped. Three minutes later, all four were gone.

The plane declared an emergency at 9.57pm because of a ‘ total electrical failure,’ then disappeare­d from the radar. A minute later, the pilots descended to 9,000 feet – 1,000 less than the minimum altitude for the region.

At 9.58pm, the plane slammed into the Cerro Gordo mountain at a speed of 115 knots . — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia