Pakistan plane crashed after pilots distracted by coronavirus fears
The pilots of a plane that crashed last month in
Pakistan, killing 98 people, were pre-occupied by the coronavirus crisis and
tried to land with the aircraft’s wheels still up, according to initial
official reports.
The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane crashed
into a crowded residential area on 22 May after both engines failed as it
approached Karachi airport for a second landing attempt, killing all but two
people on board, and a child on the ground.
The preliminary report outlines the flight’s chaotic
final minutes and a bizarre series of errors compounded by communication
failures with air traffic control.
Investigators found the plane was at more than twice
the correct altitude when it first approached the runway, and the tower advised
the pilots to circle for a more gradual descent, the report states.
But, instead of going around, the pilots attempted
to land anyway – even though they had raised the landing gear.
Air traffic control saw the Airbus A320’s engines
scrape the runway with a shower of sparks, but did not tell the cockpit. The
badly damaged engines failed as the plane turned to attempt a second landing.
Pakistan’s aviation minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan told
parliament the pilots had been discussing the coronavirus as they attempted to
land and had disengaged the craft’s autopilot.
“The pilot
and co-pilot were not focused and throughout they were having a conversation
about corona. The [virus] was on their minds. Their families were affected and
they were having a discussion about it,” Khan said.
“Unfortunately the pilot was overconfident,” the
minister added.
Khan also pointed to a troubling review of pilot
credentials that is bound to reverberate through the country’s airline
industry. He said a probe last year found that 262 of Pakistan’s 860 active
pilots had fake licenses or had cheated on exams – including an unspecified
number of PIA pilots.
The crash investigation team, which included
officials from the French government and the aviation industry, analysed
cockpit data and voice recorders.
Pakistan’s deadliest aviation accident in eight
years came days after domestic commercial flights resumed following a two-month
coronavirus lockdown.
According to the report, the plane had been on the
ground for 46 days during that time. But it was “100 percent fit for flying,
there was no technical fault”, Khan said.
Qasim Qadim – a spokesman for the Pakistan Airline
Pilots Association – called the investigation’s findings “mind-boggling”. “How
could it happen? It just baffles me,” he said.
“The greatest pilots with the best records have made
mistakes. Humans make mistakes.”
Many passengers were travelling to spend the Muslim
holiday of Eid al-Fitr with loved ones. Buildings were torn apart after the
plane’s wings sliced through rooftops, sending flames and plumes of smoke into
the air.
Khan said three people on the ground were injured,
saying for the first time that a young girl later died. A full report is
expected to be released at the end of the year, with advanced analysis of the
aircraft wreckage still ongoing.
Pakistan has a chequered military and civilian
aviation safety record, with frequent plane and helicopter crashes over the
years.




