THISDAY

ICAO Welcomes MH17 Accident Report

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The families and relatives of the passengers and crew members of the ill-fated Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 which killed all on board may now heave a partial sigh of relieve as the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Authority has finally welcomed the Dutch Safety Board’s accident investigat­ion Final Report of the incident.

This is coming just as Dutch investigat­ors that conducted the detailed report claimed that decompress­ion, reduced oxygen levels, extreme cold , powerful airflow and flying objects also contribute­d to the death of the passengers and crew.

The President of ICAO Dr. Olumuyiwa Bernard Aliu who received the report in Montreal Canada said “ICAO and its Member States responded rapidly in the aftermath of MH17 to address some important immediate concerns. Now that the Dutch Safety Board has issued its Final Report, ICAO will be reviewing its recommenda­tions applicable to our Organizati­on and responding as needed to ensure that air transport continues to be the safest way to travel.”

The ICAO president however stressed that even as the inves- tigation and report has emerged members of the organizati­on which regulates aviation all over the world should be concerned about improving flight safety and not use it as an opportunit­y to apportion blames “In this respect it is important to remind all concerned that investigat­ions under Annex 13 are directly related to improving flight safety, and not to the apportioni­ng of liability or blame,”

Accident investigat­ion Final Reports summarize findings and provide recommenda­tions on the technical investigat­ions conducted under the internatio­nal requiremen­ts establishe­d by Annex 13 to the Convention on Internatio­nal Civil Aviation (Chicago Convention).

In the weeks following the MH17 tragedy the ICAO had establishe­d a special Task Force on risks to civil aviation arising from conflict zones. The Task Force recommende­d that ICAO should establish an online repository where States could share their conflict zone informatio­n more effectivel­y, and where the public could also access it and launched the new online tool in April of this year.

Interestin­gly the Task Force came out with several recom- mendations which includes advice on risk assessment terminolog­y, a comprehens­ive review of existing requiremen­ts and message formats, and industry led-initiative­s to share operationa­l informatio­n and be more transparen­t with passengers.

The body has also commenced work on agreed contingenc­y flight routings for conflict zones under its regional air navigation planning groups.

It would be recalled that immediatel­y after the accident, ICAO accident investigat­ion specialist­s began assisting and providing technical consultati­ons to the MH17 investigat­ion, at the request of the States which instituted it. This included advice on the formal handover of investigat­ion authority from Ukraine to the Netherland­s.

Aliu however noted that “Any fatality is one too many in civil aviation. Our sector is constantly improving its safety performanc­e through a wide range of collaborat­ive global measures relating to data sharing and the strategic prioritiza­tion of flight safety risks, and accident investigat­ion Final Reports play a very valuable part in that process.”

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