Thursday, June 26, 2014

Pakistan Plane Fired on During Peshawar Landing



Police detained 200 people after a Pakistan International Airlines plane came under fire while landing in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing a female passenger and wounding two flight attendants.
Twelve bullets hit the tail side of an Airbus SAS 310 when it was about 500 meters (1,640 feet) off the ground over a “thickly populated area,” Najeeb-ur-Rehman, the city’s senior superintendent of police, said by phone. Flight PK-756 from Saudi Arabia carried 196 passengers and was attacked at about 11 p.m. local time yesterday, PIA spokesman Mashhood Tajwar said by phone from Karachi.
“There was a threat that they would attack the airport,” Najeeb-ur-Rehman said, referring to militants in the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, known as the TTP, and its affiliates. Firing at a plane while it was in the air was the “easiest way” to strike because police had tightened security at the airport, he said.
The shooting signals a greater threat to civilians after the military moved to wipe out Taliban militants following a June 9 attack on Karachi’s international airport that killed 26 people. More airlines may follow Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. in stopping flights to Pakistan, according to Chris de Lavigne, an aviation and defense analyst at Frost & Sullivan.
“There will be increased caution with regards to Pakistan,” he said by phone from Singapore. “That is now two events in a short space of time.”

Getting Bolder

Emirates, the Dubai-based airline, today said it was suspending flights to Peshawar until further notice, citing the security situation in the city. Air Arabia canceled flights to Peshawar today and expects to resume them tomorrow.
No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack. The TTP said it conducted the Karachi airport assault, prompting Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to order an offensive on the group in North Waziristan, a region near the Afghan border. The TTP wants to impose its version of Islamic Shariah law in Pakistan, which includes a ban on music and stricter rules for women.
“Today Pakistan faces the world’s most significant threat from terrorism,” Rohan Gunaratna, head of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies’ International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, said by phone. “The terrorists are getting bolder.”
Taliban spokesman Shahidullah Shahid earlier this month warned foreign investors, airlines and multinational companies to cut off business with Pakistan. Cathay Pacific said earlier this month it would cease operations in Karachi on June 28 because of “commercial reasons.”

Tribal Regions

“This is the first time a passenger plane has been fired on mid-air,” Tajwar said in comments to state-run Pakistan Television, adding that the woman killed was a Pakistani citizen. One of the stewards injured in the attack has been discharged from the hospital.
As many as 47 militants were killed yesterday in air strikes in North Waziristan and another tribal region of Khyber which also borders on Afghanistan, the military said in a statement. More than 330 Taliban insurgents have been killed in air strikes and shooting since the operation began. The military is yet to mount the ground offensive.
Sharif won an election last year after pledging peace talks with the TTP, the group at the forefront of an insurgency that has killed 50,000 people since 2001. Negotiations that began in March collapsed over the TTP’s demands for prisoner releases.

Mid-Air Shootings

There have been several mid-air shootings over the past few decades. A LionAir flight fell into the sea in Sri Lanka in 1998, killing 55 people on board, with initial reports saying the plane was shot down by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Fifteen years later, Sri Lankan Navy salvaged some parts of the aircraft.
In 2002, an Israeli charter airliner was fired on by two missiles, which missed, after it took off from the coastal town of Mombasa in Kenya. The plane landed safely in Israel. Almost at the same time, another bomb killed 13 people at a hotel filled with Israeli tourists.
A year later, a DHL cargo plane was hit by a surface-to-air missile as it took off from Baghdad. A six-minute videotape later showed one of a group of 11 masked fighters firing a shoulder-launched missile. The missile is seen shooting up into the sky and then making a sharp turn to home in on the plane.
Source : bloomberg

Aircraft Details


Status:Preliminary
Date:Tuesday 24 June 2014
Time:ca 23:00
Type:
Airbus A310-324ET
Operator:Pakistan International Airlines - PIA
Registration:AP-BGN
C/n / msn:676
First flight:1993-04-29 (21 years 2 months)
Engines:2 Pratt & Whitney PW4152
Crew:Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 12
Passengers:Fatalities: 1 / Occupants: 178
Total:Fatalities: 1 / Occupants: 190
Airplane damage:Unknown
Location:near Peshawar-Bacha Khan International Airport (PEW) (   Pakistan)
Phase:Approach (APR)
Nature:International Scheduled Passenger
Departure airport:Riyadh-King Khalid International Airport (RUH/OERK), Saudi Arabia
Destination airport:Peshawar-Bacha Khan International Airport (PEW/OPPS), Pakistan
Flightnumber:756





Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Pilot jumps from his own damaged plane

Pilot jumps from his own damaged plane







                                             Source CNN 

(CNN) -- Although Shawn Kinmartin flies planes for a sky diving service, he hadn't done any sky diving himself.
But on Saturday he didn't have a choice. The 21-year-old's Cessna had been seriously damaged when a sky diver jumped out and hit a key piece of the aircraft, Kinmartin explained on CNN's "New Day" on Monday morning.
To have a shot at survival, he'd have to jump.
But before the heart-pumping moment, Kinmartin tried to steady his plane, cruising at 11,500 feet over eastern Missouri and southern Illinois.
A fellow pilot flew up in another plane to help assess the damage. The pilot checked out Kinmartin's plane and signaled to him that the tail was badly bent.
Hopes of an emergency landing at an airport in Festus, Missouri, about 35 miles south of St. Louis, were dashed.
"We realized that I wouldn't be able to perform the landing," Kinmartin recalled.
Plus, he said, there was a car show at the airport and the runway was too short.
The decision to jump made, Kinmartin pointed the aircraft in the direction of Illinois farmland -- the least populated area possible -- and jumped, pulling the cord on the parachute pack he was already wearing.
Kinmartin watched his plane crash as he floated 1,500 feet into a soybean field. There were no injuries.
"I was nervous, a little scared but at the same time excited," he recalled on "New Day."
Sure, it was his first sky dive ever, he said, but he had excellent training at Southern Illinois University.
Laughing, Kinmartin said he really likes sky diving and wants to do it again -- next time on a tandem jump from a little higher up.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.- A Student Pilot And Instructor Were Killed Monday Night .





A student pilot and instructor were killed Monday night when a plane crashed while taking off from Daytona Beach International Airport, according to officials

The Cessna 172 aircraft crashed around 10 p.m. as, according to officials, the student was practicing takeoffs and landings.


"Looks like we found the wreckage.  It is on fire at this time," said a man communicating with the airport tower.
Volusia County Sheriff's Office said on Tuesday afternoon the victims have been "tentatively identified as 22-year-old female flight instructor Marlene Mork and 22-year-old student Gabriel De Souza Marinho Falcao."
“I came out of the shop to see what was going on and saw the fire burning,” said Jesse Akins, who works near the airport and heard an explosion.  “We thought maybe it was a brush fire and we got closer and we saw the black smoke and we realized it the material burning the tires or something, and that's when we figured out it was a plane crash."
Akins said he often sees student pilots practicing in the air.
“This is usually a pretty safe place.  It always has been, even with the students flying. I never expected to see this," he said.
The Cessna is registered to Phoenix East Aviation, a nationally accredited flight school in Daytona Beach. According to its website, the school has been around for 40 years and trains students from all over the world. 
An official for Phoenix East Aviation said scheduled flights will continue Tuesday, but students can choose not to participate.
According to the National Transportation Safety Board, initial reports from the Federal Aviation Administration indicated that engine failure on departure caused the plane to go into a tailspin and crash.  The investigation is ongoing, however.