The Jerusalem Post

Human error led to Colombia soccer team’s plane crash that killed 71

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BOGOTA (Reuters) – Errors by the pilot, airline and Bolivian regulators are to blame for a plane crash in Colombia that killed 71 people last month, including most of Brazil’s Chapecoens­e soccer team, Colombia aviation authoritie­s said on Monday.

The plane, operated by Bolivia-based charter company LaMia, crashed on a wooded hillside near Medellin because the pilot failed to refuel en route and did not report engine failures caused by the lack of fuel until it was too late, officials said.

“No technical factor was part of the accident, everything involved human error, added to a management factor in the company’s administra­tion and the management and organizati­on of the flight plans by the authoritie­s in Bolivia,” Colombia’s Secretary for Air Safety Colonel Freddy Bonilla told journalist­s.

Aviation authoritie­s in Bolivia and the airline “accepted conditions for the flight presented in the flight plan that were unacceptab­le,” Bonilla added.

Besides a lack of fuel, the plane was over its weight limit by nearly 400 kilograms and was not certified to fly at the altitude at which the journey took place, Bonilla said.

The preliminar­y conclusion­s of Colombia’s investigat­ion coincide with assertions by Bolivian authoritie­s last week that LaMia and the plane’s pilot were directly responsibl­e for the accident.

Pilot Miguel Quiroga was also a co-owner of the airline and was killed in the crash.

Gustavo Vargas Gamboa, LaMia’s chief executive, was jailed pending trial earlier this month on manslaught­er and other charges, which he has denied.

His son Gustavo Vargas Villegas, a former official with Bolivia’s aviation authority, is also being held on charges that he misused his influence in authorizin­g the license of the plane that crashed. He also says he is innocent.

Criminal charges have also been brought against LaMia co-owner Marco Antonio Rocha Benegas, whose whereabout­s are unknown, and air traffic controller Celia Castedo, who fled Bolivia after the crash and is seeking asylum in Brazil.

Bolivian authoritie­s have said the crash was an isolated incident, but that the government will accelerate the process of implementi­ng a new safety system. Colombian investigat­ors have the final word on causes of the crash, Bolivian authoritie­s have said.

The aircraft had been transporti­ng the Chapecoens­e team to the biggest game in its history, the final of the Copa Sudamerica­na.

All but three of the players and staff onboard were killed. Two crew members and one reporter also survived.

 ?? (Jaime Saldarriag­e/Reuters) ?? RESCUE CREW work through the wreckage of a plane that crashed into the Colombian jungle with Brazilian soccer team Chapecoens­e onboard on November 29.
(Jaime Saldarriag­e/Reuters) RESCUE CREW work through the wreckage of a plane that crashed into the Colombian jungle with Brazilian soccer team Chapecoens­e onboard on November 29.

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