Showing posts with label Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Four Vnukovo employees detained, questioned over Total CEO jet crash


Four Vnukovo employees detained, questioned over Total CEO jet crash. (RT).

The leading airfield maintenance engineer Vladimir Ledenev, who was managing the snow-removing work, flight operations director Roman Dunayev, trainee air traffic controller Svetlana Krivsun, and traffic controller Aleksander Kruglov, who was leading the air traffic at the time of the crash, have been detained, Investigative Committee spokesperson Vladimir Markin said.

Those detained have been questioned as suspects in the incident, Markin noted as they are suspected of violating the security requirements of the flights and for failing to conduct ground checks, which investigators allege led to a tragedy.

Moscow-based Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC) experts are continuing the investigation at Vnukovo Airport.
At the moment, the IAC continues to work at the crash site. Fragments of the aircraft are being inspected,” the committee said in a press release Wednesday. At the same time information is being gathered at the airport and the actions of air traffic control, emergency teams and other services are being analyzed, the press release added.

Radar data and CCTV footage along with meteorological conditions at the time of the accident are also being evaluated with the participation of French specialists.

IAC is confident that together with our French colleagues and aviation experts we will conduct the most thorough, independent and impartial investigation, the committee's press release said.


On Tuesday, IAC announced that it had set up a special commission to investigate the crash. Experts from French Land Transport Accident Investigation Bureau (BEA) are in Moscow to assist the investigation which is considering two main possibilities into the cause of the fatal crash – a traffic control error and the actions of the snowplow driver.

The black boxes from the crash will take up to 3 days to decode, a spokesman from the Moscow-based Interstate Aviation Committee (MAK) said Wednesday.

Experts have already begun decoding the data on the black boxes. The decoding will take two to three days. That’s in regard to the flight data recorder. The amount of time needed to transcribe the voice recorder depends on the French [experts].”


The committee maintains its finding that the snowplow driver had alcohol in his blood at the time of the accident, but the driver, Vladimir Martynenko, as well as his lawyer have denied the allegations.
 When I lost the mark, I didn’t even notice that I entered the runway... The plane was taking off. I almost didn’t see or hear it because of the working machinery and there were no lights… So there was a crash, Martynenko told the investigators during the first interrogation.

The snow plow driver said that he never even noticed the lights from the jet as he believes he never drove onto the flight strip as he was making snow clearing rounds.

Related: Video - CEO of France's Total dies in jet crash at Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport

Monday, October 20, 2014

Video - CEO of France's Total dies in jet crash at Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport



Video - CEO of France's Total dies in jet crash at Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport.(RT).

Total’s chairman and CEO was the only passenger in the Falcon 50 business jet besides three crewmembers who were also French citizens.

Total confirms with deep regret and great sadness that Chairman and CEO Christophe de Margerie died just after 10pm (Paris time) on October 20 in a private plane crash at Vnukovo Airport in Moscow, following a collision with a snow removal machine,” the company said in a statement.



During take-off at around 0:10am Moscow time on Tuesday, the light aircraft, according to preliminary data, hit a snow-clearing machine with its landing gear. Due to the damage, the pilot reportedly decided to turn back and land.

While still in the air, the plane was sending distress signals and reporting an engine fire and fuselage damage, LifeNews reports. Upon crashing on the runway, the aircraft was immediately engulfed in flames, killing everyone on board.

Debris from the aircraft was scattered up to 200 meters from the crash site, according to the rescue services. The engine was found some 50 meters from the crash site, while one of the landing gears was ripped off and discovered nearly 200 meters from the main mass of debris.

Vnukovo Airport temporarily suspended all flights following the incident, but by 2 am all operations were restored. While initials reports suggested only four people died in the tragedy, some sources claimed that five bodies were found at the crash site, one allegedly being the driver of the snowplow. The airport however later confirmed that the driver was not injured in the collision.

A criminal investigation has been opened into the violation of safety regulations after a light aircraft crash in the capital's Vnukovo airport,” transport official Tatyana Morozova told RIA. An investigative group is working at the crash site, Morozova added.

Earlier in the day, due to bad weather conditions at least 18 planes were diverted from Vnukovo to other Moscow airports, Itar-tass reported siting a source at Vnukovo. Flights landing at Moscow airhubs operate “on factual weather” conditions, meaning that a crew commander decide themselves about the possibility of landing at the destination or preceding to alternative landing routes at the capital.

Despite Western-imposed sanctions on Russia that prohibit western financing and technology transfer to some Russian energy projects, Total is continuing to pursue a natural gas project in Yamal, a joint venture with Russia's Novatek and China's CNPC.

Can we live without Russian gas in Europe? The answer is no. Are there any reasons to live without it? I think – and I'm not defending the interests of Total in Russia – it is a no,” the Total boss told Reuters back in summer. Hmmm............My guess the FSB is already roasting this snowplow driver.Read the full story here, more video's here.

French newspaper 'Le Figaro' 3 D reconstruction of the accident.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...