Times of Suriname

Lion Air victim’s family files suit against Boeing

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INDONESIA The parents of Dr. Rio Nanda Putrama, who died in the Indonesia airplane disaster last month that killed all 189 passengers on board, have sued Boeing for its alleged “unsafe design” of the 737 Max 8 aircraft. The lawsuit, filed Thursday in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, where Boeing is headquarte­red, centers on a new safety feature that can cause the 737 Max 8 aircraft to “autodive” in certain situations.

The suit alleges this is a change from prior Boeing 737 designs and that the company failed to communicat­e the change. “At no relevant time prior to the crash...did Boeing adequately warn Lion Air or its pilots of unsafe condition caused by the new ‘autodiving’ design,” the suit alleges. Putrama was flying to Pangkal Pinang in Indonesia to get married, according to his parent’s lawyers. It is the latest headache for Boeing, which has faced mounting pressure in the wake of the crash. On Wednesday, a top Lion Air official joined a US pilots’ group in alleging the company failed to warn pilots about the potential hazards of the new safety feature implicated in the crash. Zwingli Silalahi, Lion Air’s operationa­l director, said the manual did not tell pilots that in certain situations, the plane’s stallpreve­ntion system could automatica­lly trigger a response, such as lowering the airplane’s nose, to prevent or exit a stall. “We don’t have that in the manual of the Boeing 737 MAX 8. That’s why we don’t have the special training for that specific situation,” Zwingli said.

Investigat­ors are examining whether a sensor on the outside of the plane transmitte­d incorrect data that could have triggered the stallpreve­ntion system. The airline’s claims come after Boeing was similarly accused Tuesday by the Allied Pilots Associatio­n (APA), a labor union that represents American Airlines pilots, of withholdin­g informatio­n about the potential danger of the plane’s new features. On Thursday, American Airlines backed up their pilots’ claims. Lion Air Flight 610 crashed shortly after taking off from the Indonesian capital of Jakarta on October 29. Investigat­ors believe the MAX 8 plane may have experience­d problems with several sensors.

Boeing said last week that a safety bulletin issued to aircraft operators in the wake of the crash was merely meant to reinforce existing procedures. Both Lion Air and the APA reject the company’s assertion. “They (Boeing) didn’t provide us all the info we rely on when we fly an aircraft,” Capt. Dennis Tajer, a spokesman for the APA group, told CNN on Tuesday. “The bulletin is not reaffirmin­g, it’s enlighteni­ng and adding new info.” Zwingli added that Boeing’s safety bulletin did not suggest additional training for pilots operating that aircraft. “We didn’t receive any informatio­n from Boeing or from regulator about that additional training for our pilots,” he said. Zwingli said that if the result of the ongoing investigat­ion conducted by Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Commission, the US National Transporta­tion Safety Board and Boeing found that additional training was necessary, Lion Air pilots would undertake it.

On Wednesday, a Boeing spokespers­on said in an email that the company could not “discuss specifics of an ongoing investigat­ion” and that the company had “provided two updates for our operators around the world that reemphasiz­e existing procedures for these situations.”

(CNN)

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