Millennium Post

PIA blames engine failure for plane crash; probe launched

-

PESHAWAR: Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines flight PK-661 crashed after one of its two turboprop engines failed en route to Islamabad killing everyone on board, authoritie­s said on Thursday, even as they began a probe into the accident and sent bodies for DNA test to identify the victims.

The flight with 47 people, including pop singer-turned-islamic preacher Junaid Jamshed, his wife and Deputy Commission­er Chitral Osama Warraich, on board crashed in Saddha Batolni village near Havelian on Wednesday while en route to Islamabad from Chitral in Khyber-pakhtunkhw­a province. According to flight manifest, 31 men, nine women, two infants and five crew members were on board the ATR-42 aircraft, which lost contact with the Air Traffic Control (ATC) at Islamabad’s Benazir Internatio­nal Airport.

The pilot of the ill-fated flight made his first call to the air traffic control soon after the plane took off. He said that the plane s left engine was not functionin­g and moments later followed with a panicked: “Mayday! Mayday”.

An official at the Benazir Bhutto Internatio­nal Airport said that minutes before the plane crashed 4.15 PM, the pilot made the emergency call requesting permission for an emergency landing. The plane vanished from the radar screen soon after and the communicat­ion system stopped. Explaining the emergency code, a Civil Aviation Authority official said pilots used the code word ‘Mayday’ to indicate an emergency. Emergency was declared at the Benazir Bhutto Internatio­nal Airport soon after receiving the phone call. “Around 4:15 PM the ATC received an emergency call from the pilot who informed them about the engine failure. A few minutes later, a mayday distress call was received from the pilot,”

PIA Chairman Azam Saigol told reporters. The ATR-42 aircraft involved in the crash had undergone regular maintenanc­e, including an ‘A-check’ certificat­ion in October, Saigol said.

“I want to make it clear that it was a perfectly sound aircraft,” Saigol said, ruling out technical or human error. Aviation Division Secretary Irfan Elahi said that an investigat­ion team, led by Air Commodore Munir Ahmed, has been formed to find out why the ATR-42 had crashed, Dawn reported. “At the moment, there is no other reason for the plane crash other than the failure of the left engine,” he said, adding that the investigat­ors will also search for the plane’s flight data recorders.

 ?? PIC/PTI ?? Pakistani investigat­ors examine the wreckage of a passenger plane crashed in the village of Gugh, Pakistan, on Thursday
PIC/PTI Pakistani investigat­ors examine the wreckage of a passenger plane crashed in the village of Gugh, Pakistan, on Thursday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India