Serb pilots blame ‘pressures’ of working in India for Dubai-Mangalore AI plane crash
November 20th, 2010 - 2:29 pm ICT by ANIBelgrade, Nov 20 (ANI): Denying media reports that a sleepy captain was responsible for an Air India plane crash in May that killed 158 passengers, the Serbian Pilots Association has said that pilot fatigue caused by working conditions in India should be blamed for the mishap.
The Globe and Mail quoted the Serb pilots as saying that the captain, Zlatko Glusica, must not be “victimized” because the accident could have happened due to the fatigue caused by “pressures” while working in India.
“The individualization of guilt … is intended to shift the responsibility from those who have driven the crew and the passengers to death,” the group said in a statement.
The Air India Express flight from Dubai to Mangalore overshot a hilltop runway and crashed over a cliff, killing 158 people instantly, including Glusica and the co-pilot on May 22. Eight people however survived the crash.
Upon examining the information contained in the digital flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder of the Boeing 737-800 aircraft, which were found at the crash site, the Indian panel had blamed Glusica for his late reaction and failure to follow many standard operating procedures during the landing.
The crash report added to growing concern worldwide about the dangers posed by exhausted pilots working taxing schedules. Pilot unions are fighting efforts by budget-strapped airlines to get pilots to work longer hours, the paper said.
However the Serbian pilots association said that the Indian panel “created an ugly picture about the Serbian pilots … without taking into account the circumstances” that led to the crash.(ANI)
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- DGCA begins crash probe, finds voice recorder, data unit (Lead) - May 23, 2010
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- Pilots were experienced, well-rested, asserts AI chief (Second Lead) - May 23, 2010
- 158 dead as AI plane overshoots Mangalore runway, hurtles down cliff (Intro Roundup) - May 23, 2010
- JetBlue captain goes berserk on flight, subdued by passengers - Mar 29, 2012
- Mangalore air crash: All bodies of victims recovered - May 23, 2010
- 159 dead as AI plane overshoots runway, hurtles down cliff at Mangalore (Roundup) - May 22, 2010
- Hunt still on for black box of crashed aircraft: Air India (Second Lead) - May 23, 2010
Tags: air india, air india express, boeing 737 800, boeing 737 800 aircraft, co pilot, cockpit voice recorder, concern worldwide, crash report, crash site, digital flight data, flight data recorder, globe and mail, growing concern, individualization, mangalore, pilot fatigue, pilot unions, pilots association, plane crash, standard operating procedures