Air traffic controllers have told Saharareporters confidentially that
the crashed airliner Dana aircraft most likely had one failed engine
long before the pilot declared an emergency. Multiple sources confirmed
that the pilot had requested to land on Murtala Muhammad Airport’s
longer runway 18R before calling air controllers back a few minutes
later to report a total emergency.
They believe that second call was most probably when the second
engine failed. The aircraft crashed about seven nautical miles from the
local airport.
One source further explained that the MD 83 plane was overloaded
with passengers and luggage to the extent that when the first engine
failed, the pilots urgently reduced speed to enable the flight land
safely on the longer and better runway, an action that led the flight to
an extra 20 minutes delay before crashing at 3:43p.m. It had been
billed to land at 3:21p.m.
Our sources stated that the drastic reduction in thrust was the
undoing of the pilot, given the heavy pay load. To underscore their
point that the operators of the jet knew of its mechanical troubles, one
of our sources said the jet conducted a short flight test between the
Lagos and Ibadan airport on Saturday, apparently to prove to regulators
that the jet was “airworthy”.
Several employees of the Dana airlines have publicly stated that the
owners were aware as early as Sunday that the jet had mechanical
troubles, as it had struggled on a flight to Calabar, but the operators
forced the crew to fly it anyway, obviously with an eye on maximizing
profit.
Residents that witnessed the crash at Iju Agege area of Lagos have
also told Saharareporters that they watched as the pilot seemed to
struggle to give the aircraft a final thrust of flight power before the
crash, which killed everyone on board.
But speaking for the first time officially today, Dana Air's
Director of Flight Operations, Captain Oscar Wason, suggested that a
"bird strike" may have caused the crash.
Appearing on Silver Bird TV in Lagos, he said the management of the
grounded airline found remnants of birds in one of the engines of the
crashed plane.
According to him, “I don’t know what could have been responsible for
the crash, but this morning we found remnants of birds in one of the
engines.”
He noted that birds were a problem in Nigeria he has experienced
several times. “We have bird strikes and it might have been that a mass
of birds went through the engine and caused it to lose power.”
However, he said the investigations must be left to come out with an
answer. “We have found the voice recorder and that has to be sent to
either the UK or Washington. I am planning to travel out myself so that
we can found out what is the real cause of the accident.”
It will take several months, if not years, to arrive at the real
cause of the fatal crash of Dana Air 992, as Nigeria typically relies on
American investigators to unravel the cause of airline accidents.
Tunde says:
ReplyDeleteGod help us in this country..
Fashola is working.
ReplyDeleteAnd GEJ is busy looking and crying