Business Standard

Kozhikode crash report: Grounded in anomalies

Serving pilots have raised serious doubts about the veracity of the investigat­ion report

- SAI MANISH *Names changed on request to maintain anonymity

The much delayed final investigat­ion report of the Kozhikode air crash has squarely blamed the pilots — former Indian Air Force commander Deepak Sathe and his first officer Akhilesh Kumar — for the fatal crash in August 2020 that killed 21 people including both pilots.

Serving pilots have raised serious doubts over the findings of the report released in September.

The report says the 59-year-old Sathe, a diabetic, took medication­s that induced hypoglycae­mia (a drastic drop in blood sugar), which distorted his decision-making abilities, leading to the crash. It states he was “taking tablet Glimepirid­e, which has a very high potential to cause hypoglycae­mia when consumed along with other anti-diabetic drugs”.

Investigat­ors had found four common diabetic medicines — Metformin, Pioglitazo­ne, Glimepirid­e, and Dapagliflo­zin — and an Ayurvedic formulatio­n during a postcrash search of Sathe’s hotel room. His blood samples after the crash revealed the presence of the first two drugs, which diabetic pilots are not prohibited from taking.

Captain Sonia Chatterjee*, a serving airline pilot, said, “He could have kept Glimepirid­e and others so that he could have had them after the flight. He was nailed in the report for just keeping those medicines.”

R V Jayakumar, director of Indian Institute of Diabetes, Thiruvanan­thapuram, added, “Metformin and Pioglitazo­ne are not powerful drugs that are capable of inducing hypoglycae­mia. Even when taken together they rarely, if ever, induce low blood sugar.”

The probe also indicates that Sathe had been fasting for five hours while landing at Kozhikode, which could have led to “blurry vision and mental disorienta­tion”. Sathe’s post-mortem revealed undigested food in the intestine, but there was no examinatio­n of when that food was consumed. He only ate specially prepared “bland meals” inflight and in his hotel and had consumed nothing from the plane’s snack box. The report does not mention whether the cabin crew was quizzed about Sathe’s food consumptio­n on board. He was only reported to have had a cup of sugarless black coffee during the four-hour flight.

Jayakumar said, “A rare combinatio­n of not having food for a long time, his age and drug combinatio­ns were capable of inducing low blood sugar. But it is hard to believe that a long-time diabetic would have made that choice.”

Even more intriguing were the failures of crucial aircraft equipment — two of which were critical for landing in heavy rains. The city was experienci­ng well over 200 millimetre­s of rain every day. Moments before he aborted his first landing, Sathe was recorded as saying: “Isko kya ho gaya (what happened to this)?...oh s**t...wiper is gone...(sound of laughter) what a day for the wiper to go (more laughter)….”

“In that kind of rain, not having wipers is like landing with both eyes closed,” said Capt Raza Farooqui*, a serving airline pilot.

The report questioned Sathe’s motives in not diverting the flight to Coimbatore where there was no rain. The plane had enough fuel to divert even after hovering for a long time over Kozhikode. “It is easier said than done. Kozhikode has a black hole approach where there are no visible lights until you are really close to the airport. Add to that the blinding rain, sub-optimally functionin­g wipers and a host of other calculatio­ns that needed to be made, the pilot ideally would have a tunnel vision where the focus is solely on landing safely at the designated airport. At best he could have landed on autopilot,” said Capt Farooqui*.

The report says the instrument that records pressure in the right brake had been displaying “illogical” readings ever since it was installed in 2018 after cannibalis­ing it from another Air India Express aircraft. In effect, the plane had been landing for several months without knowing the true condition of the right brake. There were signs of corrosion around the brakes but the report attributed these to the damp weather when the wreckage was assembled.

In the past, the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) had warned of rubber deposits on the Kozhikode runway, which reduced friction required to stop an aircraft. On that night, poor braking and a dangerousl­y wet and badly maintained runway became a fatal combinatio­n for IX 1344. But the report blames Sathe’s decision not to use maximum auto braking settings and engaging manual braking after touchdown.

“In a rush to absolve the airport operator, key actions and analysis have not been carried out by the accident investigat­ion bureau,” said Capt Amit Singh, founder, Safety Matters Foundation, an NGO. “The pilot possibly realised that the aircraft was not decelerati­ng as per the expected rate. In order to restore braking action, the pilot released the pressure on the brakes and cancelled the thrust reverser momentaril­y before deploying them again. With this action, the braking did improve. But the plane was already almost halfway down the runway at very high speed, and eventually overshot.”

The report also raised serious questions about Sathe’s refusal to challenge the air traffic controller’s (ATC) directions to land on an alternativ­e runway. The 29-year-old ATC, who had four years of experience (three at Kozhikode), was overseeing the take-off of an Air India flight to Delhi from the runway (RW 28) on which Sathe had aborted the first landing. The ATC asked Sathe if wanted to land on the other runway, RW 10. The report states, “…the change in runway for IX 1344 should have been thoughtful­ly considered by the pilot. IX 1344 accepted to land on runway 10 in haste without taking into account the implicatio­ns of their decision.”

Sathe decided to land on RW 10 after the ATC communicat­ed tailwind speeds of eight knots while landing. But the data flight recorder showed that IX 1344 encountere­d tailwinds of 16 knots on RW 10.

Most astonishin­g was that the primary conclusion blaming the accident on the copilot’s “lack of assertiven­ess”. Sathe had almost 11,000 hours of flying experience, while Kumar, 32, was yet to clock even 2,000 hours. The report suggests Kumar should have forcibly taken over the controls and aborted the landing by bypassing the “authority gradient”. Pilots say had Kumar done that and had the result been equally fatal, he would have risked being charged for insubordin­ation and possibly sabotage even after his death.

Till the time this article went to publicatio­n, DGCA had not responded to an email raising these anomalies. The article will be updated once DGCA responds.

Monetary factors, say aviation experts, have a huge say in blaming pilots. In India, over 90 per cent of accidents are blamed on pilots, while the global figure is around half that. “I can say for sure that if the insurance company were to probe the discrepanc­ies in the runway operations and the aircraft, then not a single penny would be given as insurance,” said Capt Amit Singh.

Capt Chatterjee* added, “Blaming the pilot is the cheapest thing to do.”

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