Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Human error led to Pakistan plane crash’ PROBE INTO 2016 ACCIDENT BLAMES ENGINEERS FOR FAILING TO REPAIR EXISTING TECHNICAL FAULTS

-

ENGINEERS for Pakistan’s scandal-hit state airline failed to repair a technical fault that led to a 2016 plane crash in which all 47 people on board died, a report has found.

Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA) came under heavy scrutiny this year after one its planes came down among houses in Karachi, killing 98 people.

A furore erupted after it emerged dozens of Pakistan pilots may have been holding fake or dubious licences, leading the US and EU to temporaril­y bar the airline.

A report published late last Thursday (19) by the Aircraft Accident Investigat­ion Board said the 2016 crash of a twin-turboprop plane in the mountainou­s north was caused by at least two pre-existing “technical anomalies” – including the fracture of one of the turbine engine blades – and a third probable error.

The report found PIA’s engineerin­g department had failed to replace the faulty blade during routine maintenanc­e a month before the accident, even though it “fulfilled the criteria for replacemen­t”.

The plane burst into flames during a flight from Chitral to the capital Islamabad, and was one of the country’s worst aviation accidents at the time.

Rescuers, including hundreds of villagers, pulled charred remains from the wreckage, parts of which were found hundreds of metres away from the main site in Abbottabad district of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province. PIA said it “acknowledg­es that there were three latent factors that aligned together at the time of the crash”.

“Had any of these factors happened in isolation, the consequenc­es would not have been so devastatin­g,” it stated.

The investigat­ors noted that all three pilots had valid licences.

In May this year, just days ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, only two passengers survived when a PIA plane crashed into homes in Pakistan’s southern city of Karachi.

An initial report blamed human error by the pilot, who had been discussing the coronaviru­s pandemic as the plane attempted to land, and air traffic control.

Weeks after the crash, Pakistan’s aviation minister claimed around 260 of the country’s 860 active pilots held fake licences or cheated on exams.

An inquiry into PIA later found 17 of its pilots had suspicious licences, with seven expelled.

Until the 1970s, Pakistan’s largest airline was considered a top regional carrier but its reputation plummeted amid chronic mismanagem­ent and financial struggles.

PIA, which is helmed by a serving air force officer, has a fleet of 31 planes and a payroll of about 14,500 workers.

 ??  ?? STRUGGLING: An inquiry into PIA this year found 17 of its pilots had
suspicious licences, with seven expelled
STRUGGLING: An inquiry into PIA this year found 17 of its pilots had suspicious licences, with seven expelled

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom