Sun.Star Cebu

TransAsia offers $470T each to crash victims

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Investigat­ors are still trying to establish what caused last week’s crash, but initial reports from the black boxes found the plane’s right engine had “flamed out” about two minutes after take-off

TAIWAN’S TransAsia Airways announced on Wednesday that it would pay nearly half a million dollars in compensati­on to relatives of each of the victims of a dramatic plane crash earlier this month.

The offer of Tw$14.9 million ($470,000) for each family comes seven months after the airline made a similar payout to the families of 48 passengers killed in another crash last July.

TransAsia Airways Flight GE235 crashed on Wednesday last week shortly after take-off from Songshan airport in Taipei with 53 passengers and five crew on board, killing at least 42.

Amateur dramatic dashcam images showed the ill-fated plane hitting an elevated road as it banked steeply away from buildings before crashing into the Keeling River.

One person remains missing after two more bodies were retrieved from the freezing waters on Wednesday.

“We offered an amount of Tw$14.9 million as compensati­on for each person who died in the accident. We hope to reach a settlement with the families,” a TransAsia spokeswoma­n told AFP.

The compensati­on deal is the result of closed-door discussion­s held in Taipei on Wednesday with representa­tives from some of the families.

“We can fully understand that it would be hard for the families to accept it immediatel­y. Still we hope the representa­tives could take the proposal back and take it into considerat­ion,” the spokeswoma­n said.

She would not say if the proposal had been accepted by the families. Some compensati­on claims from the July crash remain outstandin­g as each family had “expected a different amount,” the spokeswoma­n said.

Investigat­ors are still trying to establish what caused last week’s crash, but initial reports from the black boxes found the plane’s right engine had “flamed out” about two minutes after take-off.

Warning signals blared in the cockpit and the left engine was then shut down manually by the crew for unknown reasons, Taiwan’s Aviation Safety Council said on Friday.

Analysts have said the pilots may have caused the crash by turning off the wrong engine.

Following the release of the initial crash findings the Taiwanese flight regulator Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion (CAA) de- manded that all 71 of TransAsia’s ATR pilots take an oral test on basic operation and emergency procedure of the French-made aircraft.

 ?? (AFP FOTO) ?? A TRANSASIA TURBOPROP PLANE clips an elevated motorway before crashing into the Keelung river outside Taiwan’s capital Taipei in this Feb. 4, 2015 screen grab taken from video courtesy of TVBS Taiwan.
(AFP FOTO) A TRANSASIA TURBOPROP PLANE clips an elevated motorway before crashing into the Keelung river outside Taiwan’s capital Taipei in this Feb. 4, 2015 screen grab taken from video courtesy of TVBS Taiwan.

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