Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Nepal crash came after confused pilot-airport chatter

50 of 71 people on board plane died

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KATHMANDU, Nepal — “I say again, turn!” the air traffic controller called over the radio, his voice rising, as the flight from Bangladesh swerved low over the runway at Kathmandu’s small airport.

Seconds later, the plane crashed into a field beside the runway, erupting in flames and leaving 50 of the 71 people on board dead.

That moment Monday appeared to result from minutes of confused chatter between the control tower and the pilot of the US-Bangla passenger plane, as they discussed which direction the pilot should use to land safely at the airport’ssingle runway.

A separate radio conversati­on between the tower and at least one Nepali pilot reflected the sense of miscommuni­cation.

“They appear to be extremely disoriente­d,” a man said in Nepali, watching as Flight BS211 made its approach, though it was not clear if the voice belonged to a pilot or the tower. “Looks like they are really confused,” said another man.

In the recording, posted by air traffic monitoring website liveatc.net, the pilot and the tower shifted back and forth about whether the pilot should approach the runway from the north or the south.

Just before landing, the pilot asked, “Are we cleared to land?”

Moments later, the controller came back on the air, his voice clearly anxious, and told the pilot, “I say again, turn!” Seconds after that, the controller ordered firetrucks onto the runway.

Theplane, which was headingfro­m Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka, to Kathmandu, was carrying 67 passengers and fourcrew members.

Kathmandu officials and the airline laid the blame for the accident on each other.

The airport’s general manager told reporters Monday that the pilot did not follow the control tower’s instructio­ns and approached the runway from the wrong direction.

“The airplane was not properly aligned with the runway. The tower repeatedly asked if the pilot was OK and the reply was ‘Yes,’” said the general manager, Raj Kumar Chetri.

ButImran Asif, CEO of USBangla Airlines, told reporters in Dhaka that “we cannot claim this definitely at the moment, but we are suspecting that the Kathmandu air traffic control tower might have misled our pilots to land onthe wrong runway.”

After hearing the recording between the tower and the pilots, “we assumed that there was no negligence by our pilots,” he said.

He said the pilot, who initially survived the accident but succumbed to his injuries Tuesday, was a former air force officer. Capt. Abid Sultan had flown the Bombardier Q400 series aircraft for more than 1,700 hours and was also a flying instructor with the airline.

Prior to the crash, the plane circled Tribhuvan Internatio­nal Airport twice as it waited for clearance to land, Mohammed Selim, the airline’s manager in Kathmandu, told Dhaka-based Somoy TV.

Autopsies on the dead were being performed at the Kathmandu Medical College and Teaching Hospital morgue, where some 200 relatives waited to hear about their loved ones.

M.A. Ansari of the hospital’s forensic department said positively identifyin­g all the dead could take as long as a week because many of the bodies were badly burned. By late Tuesday morning, four bodies had been identified.

Anita Bajacharya waited at the hospital with her parents and other relatives for details on her 23-year-old sister, a medical student who had just finished school in Bangladesh and was returning home on the flight. The sister, Asma Shakya, had called her mother from the airport, excited about returning home. Now her family sat outside a hospital waiting for her body to be identified.

Relatives of the passengers from Bangladesh arrived in Kathmandu late Tuesday afternoon and were escorted to the hospital by airline officials.

Nepal’s government has ordered an investigat­ion into the crash. However, Mohammed Kamrul Islam, a spokesman for US-Bangla Airlines, said the government­s of both Nepal and Bangladesh need to “launch a fair investigat­ion and find the reason behind the accident.”

 ?? Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images ?? Nepali people take part in a candleligh­t vigil in honor of the plane crash victims in Kathmandu on Tuesday, a day after the deadly crash of a USBangla Airlines plane at the internatio­nal airport. At least 49 people were killed and 22 injured when the plane crashed and burst into flames near Kathmandu airport.
Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images Nepali people take part in a candleligh­t vigil in honor of the plane crash victims in Kathmandu on Tuesday, a day after the deadly crash of a USBangla Airlines plane at the internatio­nal airport. At least 49 people were killed and 22 injured when the plane crashed and burst into flames near Kathmandu airport.

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