Add The Wire As Your Trusted Source
HomePoliticsEconomyWorldSecurityLawScienceSocietyCultureEditors-PickVideo
Advertisement

Investigators Conclude Bad Weather Behind Myanmar Army Plane Crash

The Chinese-made Y-8-200F transport plane disappeared on June 7 over the Andaman Sea during a weekly flight to Myanmar's largest city Yangon.
Simon Lewis
Jul 19 2017
  • whatsapp
  • fb
  • twitter
The Chinese-made Y-8-200F transport plane disappeared on June 7 over the Andaman Sea during a weekly flight to Myanmar's largest city Yangon.
Military soldiers carry dead bodies from a crashed military plane outside Launglon township, Myanmar June 8 , 2017. Credit: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun
Advertisement

Military soldiers carry dead bodies from a crashed military plane outside Launglon township, Myanmar June 8 , 2017. Credit: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun

Yangon: Investigators have concluded that a Myanmar military plane that crashed last month with 122 soldiers, family members and crew on board stalled and nosedived into the Andaman Sea due to bad weather, state media said on Wednesday.

The Chinese-made Y-8-200F transport plane disappeared on June 7 during a weekly flight from several southern coastal towns to Myanmar's largest city Yangon.

Advertisement

A large-scale search and rescue operation found no survivors and at least 83 bodies were pulled from the sea.

The military had previously said a large cloud was the likely cause of the disaster and a team including Myanmar military and civilian officials and Australian air force experts was set up to investigate.

Advertisement

The state-run Global New Light of Myanmar said experts had analysed weather reports and data from the "black box" flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder that were recovered in a section of the plane's tail.

Investigators concluded that the plane lost control after entering thick cloud just over 1 1/2 hours into the flight, at which point icing was detected in the engine's air intake, it said. At this point the aircraft was hit by sudden crosswinds, the newspaper said.

The adverse weather "caused the plane to stall, or lose the ability to attain lift, resulting in a spin, also known as a nose dive. The pilot was unable to recover control, according to investigators," it said.

Investigators met with officials from state-owned China National Aero-Technology Import & Export Corporation, the maker of the plane, and travelled to Xian, China, to access data from the recovered flight recorders, the report said.

They ruled out sabotage, explosion and engine failure as possible causes of the crash, it added.

(Reuters)

This article went live on July nineteenth, two thousand seventeen, at forty-four minutes past eleven in the morning.

The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.

Advertisement
Make a contribution to Independent Journalism
Advertisement
View in Desktop Mode