The Guardian (Nigeria)

Experts seek security standard review after U.S. plane thefts

- Stories by Wole Oyebade

TWO cases of stolen plane and fatal crashes in the United States have jolted the air transport community to demand a review of safety and security measures to complement access in the sector.

Experts said the two rare incidents exposed the aviation security’s blind spots, as they called for routine mental health evaluation for technician­s that have unfettered access to aircraft and airsides.

An Alaska Air employee allegedly stole the airlines’ turboprop plane last Saturday and crashed it on an island in Puget Sound, killing himself about an hour after he took off from Seattle-tacoma Internatio­nal Airport.

According to the airline, the 29-year-old man — identified as Richard Russell, had authorised access to the company’s planes to perform his job. The 76-seat Bombardier Q400 turboprop plane of regional unit Horizon Air was not scheduled to fly that evening when it was stolen.

About two days later, an Utah man also stole a plane and crashed it into his own home where his wife was staying, police said. The man, 47-year-old Duane Youd, did not survive the crash. Flames engulfed the house in the city of Payson after the crash and ensuing fire at 2:30 a.m.

Youd’s wife, as well as a boy, was inside the house at the time of the crash. They lucky escaped and the plane did not hit other buildings or any power lines, police said.

The unusual incidents, experts said, showed the limits of securing facilities, as well as in monitoring employees and addressing potential mental health issues.

An aviation security consultant and professor at the Metropolit­an State University in Denver, Jeff Price, said the physical secu-

rity layers in the airport were not designed to protect against such incidences.

Price said some measures to avoid this kind of incident are in the hiring process and psychologi­cal evaluation­s, though these also are not always foolproof.

Aviation Security Consultant, Group Captain John Ojikutu (rtd), added that the developmen­t was quite disturbing, but a lesson for the wider aviation community.

Ojikutu said while every airline had security programmes approved by the responsibl­e aviation authority, “the question to ask and to be answered is: does the security programmes of the airline allowed one person alone to have access to the airlines aircraft whether crew member or technician?”

“We and I mean our Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) and the airlines should learn appropriat­e lesson from what has happened in Seattle, especially now that we are in the midst of homegrown terrorism. “We, NCAA and airline operators must conduct regular background checks on all staff that have access to aircraft fleet at least twice yearly and extend medical psychologi­cal tests to the ground staff especially the technician­s,” Ojikutu said.

Airline executives said the depressed employee, Russell, had passed background checks, and that he did not have a pilot license. He used a tow to turn the plane around 180 degrees before he taxied to a runway, the company said. After taking off, made dramatic loops in the air before it crashed, video shot by onlookers showed.

“We don’t know how he learned to do that,” said Horizon’s CEO, Gary Beck, about how the employee came to operate the aircraft, noting the ignition on a plane isn’t like that of a car.

 ??  ?? Executive Director, Overland Airways, Aduke Atiba ( left); Nigeria’s Ambassador to Togo, HE. Olusola Iji; DG Togo CAA, Col. Dokisime Gnama-latta; MD, Overland Airways, Capt. Edward Boyo; Marie Folly-kossi, and former Secretary, AFRAA, Christian Folly-kossi, at launch of Overland Airways’ Lagos-cotonou-lome flights, recently
Executive Director, Overland Airways, Aduke Atiba ( left); Nigeria’s Ambassador to Togo, HE. Olusola Iji; DG Togo CAA, Col. Dokisime Gnama-latta; MD, Overland Airways, Capt. Edward Boyo; Marie Folly-kossi, and former Secretary, AFRAA, Christian Folly-kossi, at launch of Overland Airways’ Lagos-cotonou-lome flights, recently

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