Like Germanwings, a Plane Crashed in Africa due to Pilot’s Insanity. The Iata didn’t React

Questo articolo si può leggere anche in italiano qui
Our Special Correspondent
Massimo A. Alberizzi
Nairobi, 30th March 2015

There are many similarities between the Germanwings’s plane crash provoked by the German Andreas Lubitz, co-pilot of the Airbus A320, flight 4u 9525 from Barcelona to Dusseldorf on 24th March 2015, where 150 people were killed, and the Mozambique airlanes’ plane crash on 29th November 2013. The plane was piloted by Herminio Dos Santos Fernandes , LAM (Linhas Aéreas de Moçambique) and was on the way from Maputo to Luanda (Angola). Both planes were deliberately crashed.

The 22th December 2013,  the head of the Civil Aviation Institute, Joao Abreu, told  Herminio dos Santos Fernandes, had a “clear intention” to crash. The inquiries were conducted by Namibians, Brazilians, Mozambiques and Americans. The plane crashed in Namibia.

During a news conference Abreu said: “Dos Santos Fernandes locked himself in the cockpit, and did not allow his co-pilot back inside until moments before the plane hit the ground”. Abreu did not explain the reason for the behaviour of the pilot, but he said that, according to the registration of the black  box,  the co-pilot was punching against the door and was screaming several times.

LAM’s plane was quite new, it’s first flight was in November 2012; during the crash 32 people died, including the four crew members.

For security reasons LAM cannot fly in Europe, but LAM  is a IATA member, International Air Transport Association, and the management of IATA was informed about the reasons of that crash. So why, since December 2013, has nobody from IATA proposed a new regulation: two people in the cockpit at all times? This procedure now, after the Germanwings crash, should be accepted as soon as possible by all companies.

Maybe somebody thought that the LAM crash was a typical story from the “Wild Africa” that could never happen  in the civilized Europe and especially in the super efficient Germany.

The question that now we pose is: Somebody after the crash of the Mozambican plane in Namibia asked to improve the security rules to prevent that an insane pilot to provoke another catastrophe like that of Germanwings?

Massimo A. Alberizzi
massimo.alberizzi@gmail.com
twitter @malberizzi

Questo articolo si può leggere anche in italiano qui

maxalb

Corrispondente dall'Africa, dove ho visitato quasi tutti i Paesi

Recent Posts

Libertà di stampa in Lesotho: giornalista minacciato di morte per inchiesta esplosiva sulla corruzione

Speciale per Africa ExPress Sandro Pintus 29 aprile 2024 In Lesotho, piccolo reame africano, enclave…

24 ore ago

La giunta militare del Burkina Faso non accetta critiche: BBC e Voice of America sospesi per due settimane

Speciale per Africa ExPress Cornelia I. Toelgyes 26 aprile 2024 Il regime militare burkinabé ha…

2 giorni ago

Epidemia di vaiolo delle scimmie esplode in Congo Brazzaville

Africa ExPress 25 aprile 2024 La Repubblica del Congo ha denunciato un'epidemia di mpox, il…

3 giorni ago

Fame e guerra spingono gli etiopi alla fuga: nuovo naufragio a largo di Gibuti

Speciale per Africa ExPress Cornelia I. Toelgyes 23 aprile 2024 Nuovo naufragio a largo di…

5 giorni ago

Padre Zanotelli accusa: “Vogliono togliere controlli e trasparenza al mercato delle armi”

Speciale per Africa ExPress Marina Piccone 22 Aprile 2024 “Il nodo centrale è l’eliminazione del…

6 giorni ago

Alla maratona di Londra i re sono gli atleti keniani

Dal Nostro Corrispondente Sportivo Costantino Muscau 21 aprile 2024 Buckingham Palace sarà pure la residenza…

1 settimana ago