The Jerusalem Post

Wing-flap fault said to be main theory behind Black Sea Russian jet crash

- • By ANDREW OSBORN

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russian investigat­ors looking into the Sunday crash of a military plane that killed all 92 on board believe a fault with its wing flaps was the reason it plunged into the Black Sea, an investigat­ive source told the Interfax news agency on Tuesday.

The plane, a Tupolev-154 belonging to the Defense Ministry, disappeare­d from radar screens two minutes after taking off on Sunday from Sochi in southern Russia, killing dozens of Red Army Choir singers and dancers en route to Syria to entertain Russian troops in the run-up to the New Year.

The three black-box flight recorders from the aircraft were found on Tuesday, Russian news agencies said, amid unconfirme­d reports that authoritie­s had grounded all aircraft of the same type. The Defense Ministry confirmed one box had been found.

The Life.ru news portal, which has close contacts to law-enforcemen­t agencies, said it had obtained a readout of one of the pilot’s last words, indicating a problem with the wing flaps: “Commander, we are going down,” the pilot was reported to have said.

There was no official confirmati­on of the readout.

The Interfax news agency separately cited an unnamed investigat­ive source as saying preliminar­y data showed the wing flaps had failed and not worked in tandem.

As a result, the aging Soviet-era plane had not been able to gather enough speed and had dropped into the sea, breaking up on impact.

If confirmed, the technical failure will raise questions about the future of the TU-154, which is still actively used by Russian government ministries, but not by major Russian commercial airlines.

Interfax cited an unnamed source as saying Russia had grounded all TU-154 planes until the cause of Sunday’s crash became clear. There was no official confirmati­on of that.

The Defense Ministry says the jet, built in 1983, had last been serviced in September and underwent more major repairs in December 2014.

Russian pilots say the TU-154 is still flight worthy, though major Russian commercial airlines have long since replaced it with Western-built planes. Experts say only two are registered with Russian passenger airlines with the rest registered to various government ministries.

The last big TU-154 crash was in 2010, when a Polish jet carrying then-president Lech Kaczynski and much of Poland’s political elite went down in western Russia, killing everyone on board.

The Defense Ministry said search and rescue teams had so far recovered 12 bodies and 156 body fragments.

 ?? (Russian Emergencie­s Ministry) ?? WRECKAGE from the crash of the Russian military Tupolev TU-154 passenger jet is lifted from the Black Sea during a search operation on Monday.
(Russian Emergencie­s Ministry) WRECKAGE from the crash of the Russian military Tupolev TU-154 passenger jet is lifted from the Black Sea during a search operation on Monday.

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