Kuwait Times

Pilots blamed for 2014 TransAsia crash on Taiwan island

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TAIPEI: Two TransAsia Airways pilots caused a 2014 plane crash that left 48 people dead by flying too low as they attempted to land on an island during a typhoon, Taiwan’s aviation authoritie­s said yesterday. Taiwan’s aviation body said the pilots flew below the minimum altitude required in poor visibility caused by Typhoon Matmo on July 23, 2014, in its final report into the airline’s second fatal accident in a year.

The procedural mistake was widespread among TransAsia’s pilots at the time, an aviation official said, endangerin­g passenger and crew safety. Ill-fated Flight GE222 was carrying 54 passengers and four crew when it slammed into trees and houses near Magong city airport in the Taiwan Strait’s scenic Penghu islands, leaving just 10 survivors. Two French nationals were among those killed in the island’s worst air disaster in a decade. “An airworthy aircraft under the control of the flight crew was flown unintentio­nally into terrain with limited awareness by the crew of the aircraft’s proximity to terrain,” the Aviation Safety Council said in the investigat­ion report.

The ATR 72-500 propeller plane had deviated off course during thunder and heavy rain as Typhoon Matmo pounded Taiwan. “They were not visual with the runway environmen­t, contrary to standard operating procedures,” the report said. According to flight safety regulation­s, the pilots were required to maintain their altitude when their plane descended to 330 feet (100 metres), but the aircraft continued to descend. “We found the pilots did not follow the standard operating procedure,” council director Thomas Wang told reporters. “Then we discovered TransAsia’s team of pilots flying the ATR fleet also had similar problems, and we wanted to know why the carrier tolerated this among its pilots, and why the Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion (CAA) did not discover this while carrying out regular inspection­s,” he said.

Wang said “the company’s pilots were flying without abiding by standard procedures, part of a workplace culture which endangered flight safety”. According to transcript­s of the plane’s two black boxes, which record voices in the cockpit and other in-flight data, the co-pilot twice replied “no” when asked by the pilot whether he had seen the runway. —AFP

Songs today, challenges tomorrow

Suu Kyi faces deep challenges ahead to rebuild a country worn down by war, poverty and still under the influence of a powerful military. Yet yesterday in a once unthinkabl­e atmosphere of collaborat­ion, MPs took to the stage to belt out farewell songs as more than a thousand lawmakers old and new tucked into a slap-up meal in a grand hall after the closing session. Outgoing parliament speaker Shwe Mann crooned an English-language school favorite, urging the audience to join him as he

 ??  ?? NEW TAIPEI CITY, Taiwan: Thomas Wang, director of Taiwan’s Aviation Safety Council, speaks during a press conference of the final report of the Transasia Flight GE222 that crashed in Penghu in 2014 yesterday.—AFP
NEW TAIPEI CITY, Taiwan: Thomas Wang, director of Taiwan’s Aviation Safety Council, speaks during a press conference of the final report of the Transasia Flight GE222 that crashed in Penghu in 2014 yesterday.—AFP

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