SENIOR
PILOT IGNORED WARNINGS FROM FEMALE CO-PILOT BEFORE AIRCRAFT ENDED UP IN
DRAINAGE DITCH
A senior Air India Express pilot ignored the recommendations of his junior
female co-pilot while landing in bad weather, and ended up driving the aircraft
into an open drain. That's according to a report from India's aviation
authority.
A report, seen by the Hindustan Times, noted that the pilot-who was 30 years
older than his colleague-overruled advice from his co-pilot to request
assistance while landing in heavy rain at an airport in the southern Indian
city of Kochi in September 2017.
The 102 passengers aboard Air India Express flight IX 452 from Abu Dhabi ended
up stuck in an open water drain following the landing. Three travelers were
injured and the aircraft was seriously damaged, its front landing gear
collapsed.
An official at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), who asked not
to be named, told the Hindustan Times the organization found the
"incorrect judgment" of the pilot in command to be at fault. The
official noted that heavy rain and poor visibility were "contributory
factors."
The directorate general's report said that the co-pilot told the senior pilot
that she could not see the runway markings below and requested he slow the
plane down. She then suggested he call for a "follow-me" vehicle that
is used to guide aircraft down in tricky landing conditions.
"There was no response" from the pilot, the report said. Upon
landing, the aircraft crashed into the open water drain after taking an early
turn some 295 feet before it should have. The pilot then applied the throttle
three times to try to escape the drain even though his co-pilot had asked him
not to. The aircraft eventually came to rest on its engines and the lower
fuselage, with the surviving landing gears stuck in the air.
The DGCA reflected on the 13,000 hours and 30 years difference in flight
experience between the two aviators, and suggested airlines should avoid
pairing pilots with such a gulf in flight time. The two pilots had never worked
together before their ill-fated flight.
"Coordination was lacking from [the pilot in command] side," the
report said. In 2016, the senior pilot in question was found to be
alcohol-positive twice and had his flight license suspended for three months.
The pilot said he had not been able to sleep the night before, and the cockpit voice
recorder picked up the sound of him yawning, the report explained.
PG Prageesh, head of corporate communications for Air India Express, said the
airline's "top management" had received the DGCA recommendations,
which would be "duly" implemented.
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