Tuesday, August 12, 2014

United, Saudi aircrafts in near-miss

New Delhi: Two passenger aircrafts, one from Bangladesh and the other from Saudi Arabia, narrowly avoided a mid-air collision over the eastern Indian city of Jamshedpur early on Monday, it has now been revealed.
Officials say one of the pilots wrongly acted on a command from Air Traffic Control (ATC) that was not meant for his aircraft.
The incident took place around 8.30am on Monday morning.
The aircrafts were not to land in Kolkata; rather they were over-flying the Kolkata sky on way to their respective destinations.
Sources at Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International (NSCBI) Airport in Kolkata said that three passenger flights -- a Saudi Arabia Airlines flight from Hong Kong to Jeddah, an United Airways (Bangladesh) flight from Muscat to Dhaka and an Emirates flight from Dubai to Dhaka -- were flying through the Kolkata Flight Information Region (FIR) on way to their destinations.
The three aircrafts were flying at some 30 to 40 nautical miles distance from Kolkata and were very close to Jamshedpur.
The ATC at NSCBI Airport was regulating the flights.
In course of managing these flights, an ATC radarscope operator sent a command to the Emirates flight to descend in the sky from the level the aircraft was flying then. But instead, the pilot of United Airways flight picked up the command and took down his aircraft by some 300 feet.
That brought the aircraft very close to the Saudi Arabian Airlines flight and a collision appeared imminent.
It was then that the Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) of both the flights automatically got activated, sending an emergency alert to the pilots.
The pilot of the United Airways flight, with instruction from the Kolkata ATC, ascended quickly and thus narrowly averted a mid-air collision.
12/08/14  bdnews24.com
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