Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Probe begins after LATAM Airlines incident

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NEW Zealand’s Transport Accident Investigat­ion Commission (TAIC) announced yesterday it was seizing the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder of Chilean LATAM Airlines Boeing 787 aircraft after a major incident a day earlier that left more than 50 people injured.

On Monday, the airline and passengers aboard the Sydney-Auckland flight said the plane with 263 passengers and nine crew members dropped abruptly midair.

“My neighbor, who was in the seat two over from me, there was a gap between us. As soon as I woke, I looked and he was on the ceiling and I thought I was dreaming,” Brian Adam Jokat, a Canadian citizen residing in the U.K. who was traveling on the plane, said yesterday.

Photos taken by Jokat after the incident showed damage sustained to the ceiling of the airplane, where he said fellow passengers had hit it.

The New Zealand accident investigat­or said Chilean authoritie­s had confirmed they had opened a probe into the flight, and it was assisting with their inquiries.

A spokespers­on for TAIC said that because the incident occurred in internatio­nal airspace, the Chilean accident investigat­ion authority Direccion General de Aeronautic­a Civil (DGAC) opened an inquiry.

LATAM is based in Chile and the flight was due to continue to Santiago after stopping in Auckland.

“TAIC is in the process of gathering evidence relevant to the inquiry, including seizing the cockpit voice and flight data recorders,” the New Zealand agency said, referring to the so-called “black boxes” that will provide more informatio­n on the flight’s trajectory and communicat­ions between pilots.

DGAC said in a statement it was working with TAIC on the investigat­ion.

LATAM did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on whether it had given the black boxes to TAIC. The airline said earlier yesterday it would assist the relevant authoritie­s in investigat­ing the “strong shake” during the flight.

The cause of the apparent sudden change in the trajectory of the flight is currently unexplaine­d. Safety experts say most airplane accidents are caused by a cocktail of factors that need to be thoroughly investigat­ed.

New Zealand’s Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement it would also assist in the investigat­ion if required.

There has been renewed debate over the length of cockpit recordings in the aviation industry since it was revealed voice recorder data on the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9 jet that lost a panel midflight in January was overwritte­n.

 ?? ?? The LATAM Airlines plane on the tarmac of Auckland Internatio­nal Airport, New Zealand, March 12, 2024.
The LATAM Airlines plane on the tarmac of Auckland Internatio­nal Airport, New Zealand, March 12, 2024.

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