Marlborough Express

The last images on TE901

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Sarah Myles remembers the moment when she saw decades-old footage of her grandfathe­r during the final minutes of his life. It was on a film shot by a passenger aboard Air New Zealand flight TE901 on November 28, 1979, not long before the aircraft crashed into the slopes of Mt Erebus in Antarctica, killing all 257 people on board.

Among the dead was Myles’ grandfathe­r, Frank Christmas.

The footage was first broadcast on the Australian 60 Minutes programme in 1982 and has been screened a handful of times since.

It shows passengers happy and relaxed. Drinking, taking photograph­s and peering out at the ice below.

Myles saw it on a television documentar­y about 15 years ago. Suddenly, her grandfathe­r walked into the frame. ‘‘It was a surprise,’’ she said.

‘‘Like you instantly go back into this place of trauma. Oh my God, how’s Mum going to react? How’s Nana going to react? We couldn’t prepare ourselves for it because he was just there on the screen.’’

Myles’ relationsh­ip to the footage has since changed and she has written a book, Towards the Mountain, about her grandfathe­r and the Erebus disaster, and how controvers­y in the aftermath of the crash made it difficult for her family to grieve.

Myles said although it was a shock to see the film, ultimately the sight of her grandfathe­r in it actually helped. The family had long been troubled that they hadn’t been able to view his body when it was recovered.

‘‘So for 30-odd years before that footage even came out on New Zealand television, it was almost a question of, ‘Well is he really dead? Was he really on the flight?’

‘‘Seeing that photo for us of Frank was important because it showed us that he was actually, really, truly, dead. He was dead. He was on the flight. This did happen to him and it was the proof that we needed. That sounds very strange because he obviously didn’t come home, but there was no closure or end point to that.

‘‘I can see it as a real blessing ... not everyone got footage of their loved one or got to see their loved one.’’

Seeing Frank Christmas in the footage helped Myles and her family, but it will not be for everyone. One part shot out of a window gave a clue that it was filmed shortly before the crash.

‘‘The altitude is not high,’’ aviation historian Richard Waugh said. ‘‘It’s probably in the last five to 10 minutes before impact, so if you don’t know what you’re about to see it’s quite jarring . . . For some people I could see it as revealing the excitement and the joy of a scenic flight and they’re all thrilled about it. For others it could be quite heart-wrenching . . . That’s the range of emotions you get with these hundreds of Erebus families.’’

Stuff has chosen to show the footage and still photos here to help re-focus the story of the Erebus disaster onto the victims.

During the past 40 years, Erebus has been dogged by controvers­y. That left many families of the victims feeling marginalis­ed and voiceless. Only now are there plans to build a national memorial.

Waugh, who is closely involved in that, said he sensed that attention was finally shifting back to the 257 victims and their families. ‘‘I don’t think New Zealand as a nation at that time sort of knew quite how to react. I think we’ve learned so much with regards to the [Canterbury earthquake­s] and Pike River [mine disaster] that the pastoral priority of the victims and their families was sort of lost sight of [after Erebus] and that was a terrible thing.’’

You can listen to White Silence on Stuff, or via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or any other app using the RSS feed.

A star witness and self-described ‘‘compulsive liar’’ has been accused of attacking slain Dunedin teen Amber-rose Rush.

Defence counsel Jonathan Eaton, QC, put the allegation to the witness, who spoke from behind a screen, during the murder trial of Venod Skantha in the High Court in Dunedin yesterday.

Eaton suggested the witness was ‘‘personally involved into going into Amber’s room and attacking her’’. ‘‘You are protecting your own position in order to implicate Dr Skantha.’’

Skantha, 32, denies killing Amber-rose, 16, and four charges of threatenin­g to kill.

The witness, who described himself as a compulsive liar in a police interview, admitted to Eaton he tended to ‘‘exaggerate a lot’’.

Eaton produced messages pulled from Facebook, including the witness contacting RNZ saying he knew who committed the murder.

‘‘I like attention ... That would be attention for me.’’

He was staying at the Balclutha home of Skantha’s former girlfriend when he received a call on Saturday from a friend confirming Amber-rose was dead from a suspected suicide.

She died from multiple stab wounds to the back of her head and was found by her mother on the morning of February 3, 2018.

Skantha asked the witness to put the call on loudspeake­r, and when hearing the news about Amberrose said: ‘‘I can’t believe it … she’s dead’’.

The witness said Skantha was smiling, and did a gesture akin to a fist pump.

The pair returned in Skantha’s BMW car to Dunedin on Sunday, and after stopping at the home of the accused, went to visit Lisa Ann Rush, Amber-rose’s mother.

The witness said he was nervous because he was there with the man he says killed her daughter.

The trial continues.

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