The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Glitch temporaril­y grounds all aircraft in New Zealand

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WELLINGTON: All commercial and civilian aircraft in New Zealand were temporaril­y grounded yesterday when a fault crippled the nation’s air traffic control system, causing long delays and some cancellati­ons.

Airways New Zealand, which manages air traffic control in the South Pacific country, said all flights, including internatio­nal and domestic services, were affected.

The government agency insisted no planes or passengers were in danger during the outage, which lasted more than two hours and left air traffic controller­s without any radar.

As a result, all flights were banned from taking off and those already in the air were guided down using “visual manual separation” -- using eyesight and radio contact -- the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said.

Airways NZ blamed the problem on ‘an internal network failure’.

“Airways immediatel­y suspended all flights while we investigat­ed the issue and until we could be satisfied that we could operate safely,” it said.

“We have now identified the issue and thoroughly tested the integrity of the system.”

Transport Minister Simon Bridges said air traffic controller­s communicat­ed with flights via radio during the radar outage, also stressing there was “absolutely no compromise to the safety of passengers or planes.”

But the CAA said it was concerned about the incident and had launched a safety investigat­ion.

A CAA spokesman said he was unaware of any similar failures in the past and it was being treated seriously.

“We’ll certainly be very keen to find out exactly what happened,” he told AFP.

Asked whether such a scare was unacceptab­le to the travelling public, he responded: “Absolutely”.

Local media reported close to 200 flights were affected, with long delays and some cancellati­ons at airports around the country.

Passenger Paul Le Comte was awaiting take-off at Christchur­ch airport when the ban was imposed and said he and his fellow passengers experience­d a number of false starts before finally departing.

“Looks like Airways NZ has found the extension cord for the radar that the cleaning lady kicked out. We are taking off soon baby. Thanks,” he joked on Twitter.

Anna Smith told Radio New Zealand she was trying to travel from Wellington to Hawke’s Bay for a funeral.

“We don’t have many options at the moment... until we get to the front of the queue we won’t really know what’s happening,” she said.

Air New Zealand said 160 of its flights were affected and it would take time for the backlog to clear.

Auckland airport, the country’s largest, warned travellers to expect delays, while Christchur­ch airport advised them to contact airlines for flight informatio­n.

Salis Elias told TVNZ said he concerned at the reason for his plane’s delayed departure from Auckland but was making the most of the situation. — AFP

Airways immediatel­y suspended all flights while we investigat­ed the issue and until we could be satisfied that we could operate safely.

Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)

Solar Impulse set to take off early today

TOKYO: A solar-powered plane that has been trapped in Japan for three weeks by the rainy season is set to take off for Hawaii early today, the team said.

Solar Impulse 2 had been trying to fly from Nanjing, China to Hawaii, when a developing weather front forced it to divert to the central Japanese city of Nagoya at the start of the month.

Ever since, the crew has been scouring long-range forecasts for an opportunit­y to restart the first ever round-the-world attempt by an aircraft powered only by the sun.

A chance to do so presented itself yesterday.

“Solar Impulse will attempt to fly to Hawaii on Wednesday, June 24th at 2.30am local time (1730 GMT, Tuesday)” the team said. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows an aerial view of Auckland Internatio­nal Airport. All aircraft in New Zealand were grounded after a fault in the South Pacific nation’s air traffic control system. — AFP photo
File photo shows an aerial view of Auckland Internatio­nal Airport. All aircraft in New Zealand were grounded after a fault in the South Pacific nation’s air traffic control system. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A Japanese P3-C Orion plane taxis before taking off at an airport runway in Puerto Princesa, Palawan, west Philippine­s. — Reuters photo
A Japanese P3-C Orion plane taxis before taking off at an airport runway in Puerto Princesa, Palawan, west Philippine­s. — Reuters photo

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