Six Years After, Sosoliso Plane Crash Blamed on Power Failure
Sosoliso air crash
Six years after the Sosoliso plane
crash in Port Harcourt, killing over 100 passengers, most of them
children, facts emerged yesterday that power failure at the Port
Harcourt Airport was responsible for the accident.
Although the Federal Government is yet
to make public the report of the panel that investigated the crash, the
pioneer Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Accident
Investigation Bureau (AIB), Mr. Angus Ifeanyi Ozoka, who headed the
investigative panel, said at the point of landing, the pilot lost sight
of the runway because there was no diesel to power the generator for
the runway lights.
Ozoka, who spoke with reporters in
Abuja on how to improve safety in the aviation industry against the
backdrop of the June 3 plane crash involving Dana Air, said: “From the
way we concluded our report after several months of investigations, the
aircraft was coming to land, it didn’t have the runway in sight.
“It couldn’t see the runway as it was
raining very heavily. The runway lights were not on because at the
Port Harcourt Airport they were trying to save fuel.
“In the day time, they would switch
off the generator, if there was no electricity and at night they would
not switch on the generator except a pilot requested when he was
approaching.
“So when the plane was at 8 nautical
miles from the airport, it called and asked if it was raining, they
told him no precipitation, they gave him the wind direction and speed,
until the plane got to the decision altitude and went below it.”
He added that by the time the Sosoliso
plane was approaching for landing, the wind direction suddenly changed
dramatically, becoming heavier with associated wind shear activity; as
such, the strength of the wind forced the plane to slam into the ground.
“The plane crashed on the grass side and disintegrated into a total wreckage site of 1.2 kilometres.
“The plane crashed on the grass side and disintegrated into a total wreckage site of 1.2 kilometres.
“First, the plane touched the ground,
then it bounced into an exposed concrete drainage where the number two
engine and staircase were dislodged in that concrete and started
disintegrating into pieces, with total land wreckage of 1.2km. In that
situation, it was difficult to fight a fire over a spread of 1.2km,” he
said.
Ozoka said government through Nigerian
Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) should set strict conditions for all
airline operators in the country to meet and those who cannot do so
should be allowed to wind up.
According to him, government is not
Father Christmas that operators should run to for bailouts, adding that
anybody who wants to venture into the aviation industry should know
that the industry is both capital and labour intensive.
He suggested that government’s
22-year-age limit for entry of aircraft into the country should be
revisited as any aircraft above 20 years is presumed to be operating
above the life cycle of that aircraft.
However, he said with good maintenance, some aircraft could still be kept airborne for over 25 years before they are retired.
Meanwhile, relatives of the Dana Air plane crash are still having trouble claiming the bodies of their loved ones at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH).
Meanwhile, relatives of the Dana Air plane crash are still having trouble claiming the bodies of their loved ones at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH).
Some of the relations of the victims
who were seen yesterday wailing and agonising over their inability to
claim the bodies, accused LASUTH officials of playing pranks.
The hospital officials are insisting
that it will not release more bodies until all DNA tests have been
concluded and results released to ensure that no family is given the
wrong body.
A woman was seen at the mortuary
wailing as she lamented the endless bottlenecks that had prevented her
from collecting the body of her relative. well, what can more can we say but na wa o for naija
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