Times of Oman

Emiliano Sala plane crash: UK investigat­ors publish final report

- - DW

LONDON: British aviation investigat­ors said the plane carrying late Argentinia­n footballer Emiliano Sala crashed after the pilot lost control while attempting to avoid bad weather.

In January 2019, Sala, then 28, was on his way from Nantes Airport in France to the southern Welsh city of Cardiff when the single-propeller PA 46 Malibu light aircraft he was on crashed 22 nautical miles (40.7 kilometres) in the British Channel northwest of Guernsey island. Both he and the plane’s pilot, David Ibbotson, were killed in the crash.

The Argentinia­n forward had just completed a 15 million pound (€17 million, $19 million) move to Cardiff City Football Club from French side Nantes. He had returned to France to collect his belongings before returning to the UK.

The Argentinia­n forward had just completed a 15 million pound (€17 million, $19 million) move to Cardiff City Football Club from French side Nantes. He had returned to France to collect his belongings before returning to the UK.

Sudden manoeuvre

In its final report published on Friday, The UK Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch (AAIB) said the pilot lost control of the aircraft during a manually-flown turn.”

The report said the turn was “probably initiated to remain in or regain Visual Meteorolog­ical Conditions.”

The AAIB found that the plane was traveling “at an airspeed significan­tly in excess of its design maneuverin­g speed.”

Its investigat­ion also found that the pilot was “probablyaf­fected by carbon monoxide poisoning.”

The report pointed out that the flight “was not conducting in accordance with safety standards applicable to commercial operations.”

The flight was also being operated at night and in poor weather conditions and the pilot had no training in night flying and no recent practice in instrument flying.

“Neither the pilot nor the aircraft had the required licenses or permission­s to operate commercial­ly,” the report said.

The investigat­ion also found that the plane did not have a carbon monoxide detector with an active warning, one that would have alerted the pilot of the toxic gas in time for him to adjust.

The report also said that “Inservice inspection­s of exhaust systems do not eliminate the risk of (carbon monoxide) poisoning.”

Manslaught­er charges dropped

The report comes two days after British police dropped manslaught­er charges against a 64-year-old man. The man was arrested on suspicion of manslaught­er by an unspecifie­d unlawful act last June, but was released was released pending an investigat­ion. But police said on Wednesday that it would not take further action against the man.

Sala’s death prompted an outpouring of emotion from the footballin­g world. The incident was also mired in controvers­y as Nantes and Cardiff City haggled over whether the transfer fee should indeed be paid.

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