Was it a pilot error?

A doctor buries his mistake. A pilot is buried with his. Even thought I sit 7,200 miles away from the scene of the crash, the shock was palpable. I have lived in Islamabad for 25 years. I love commercial aviation and have read countless books on the subject with a focus on flight safety. Despite many air accidents that we read about, flying is the safest form of travel. It is calculated that if you were born on an airplane and flew in it and never got off, you would not be involved in a fatal accident until you are 78 years old. Those are pretty good odds.

Yet when a crash does happen we feel a sense of fear and trepidation. What caused a sophisticated fly-by-wire Airbus A321 – with the most advanced avionics and systems that man has created to date – to fly into a hill? The commander, Captain Pervaiz Chaudhry, was an ex-PIA pilot with thousands of hours of flying time. He must have made hundreds of landings and take-offs from Islamabad airport. How can a highly experienced pilot trained on the most sophisticated six-axis motion simulators (which can be more challenging to fly than a real aircraft) pilot a high-tech aircraft into a wall and kill everyone?

Two aircraft ahead of the A321 broke off their approaches and diverted to Lahore. However, the weather can change rapidly and for the better. It is my sense, based on discussions on internet aviation forums, that the captain was making a circle-to-land approach. This is a tricky manoeuvre, used when the wind in Islamabad is out of the east. The procedure calls for a normal Instrument Landing System (ILS) approach to Runway 30. At a specified height and presuming that the pilot can see the runway he breaks off the approach, curves to the right and then turns left and flies parallel to the Margalla Hills, turns left again and approaches the opposite Runway 12 coming in over Murree Road. He can either keep visual separation from the Margalla Hills to his right or if the hills are shrouded in low clouds as they were that fateful day, he stays within an arc (which is drawn from a point at the airport). This arc is clearly displayed on the navigation display (ND) as a curved line. I do not recall the distance of the arc from the airport but obviously the arc is calculated to keep the plane clear of the surrounding high terrain.

Read more of this post

Plane crash passengers list released

The passengers list is available in the attached video. They were travelling in the Airblue’s Airbus A-321 that took off from Karachi bound for Islamabad with 146 passengers and six crew members on board.

The plane crashed in the Margalla Hills early on Wednesday morning.

List below:

PYAR ALI
IMTIAZ ALI KURD
SYEED SHAAN-E-HUSSAIN NAQVI
PREM CHAND
HASSAN JAVED KHAN
SYED ARSALAN AHMED
MOHD. TUFAIL
ABDUL REHMAN
MOHD. FAISAL RASHEED
MOHD. OVAIS
HUSSAIN ALAM
GHULAM ABBAS
NAVEED ILYAS
MOHD. ALI MUGHAL
MOHD AFTAB
SHIREEN LODHI
MOHD. NAWAB HASSAN
ASIM ARAIN
ALI SHERAZI
MOHD. BASHIR
ZAHID HABIBI
DR.MIRKO CVJFTICANIN
ASIA BEGUM
MOHD. UMAIR KHAN
HAJI REHMAT GUL
MOHD. SAQIB RAFIQ SHAIKH
MISHA DAWOOD
ALI ASGHAR RAJAB ALI
RASHIDA TYEB KHAN
MURTAZA TYED KHAN
MALIK MOHD. YOUSUF

Pilot-to-tower recording disclosed

Sources in the Civil Aviation Authorities have revealed the last conversation between the pilot and the control tower.

Sources have said that the control tower issued an initial warning when the plane was getting out of the limits of the runway. The plane was travelling at nine point five nautical miles while it had to turn at five nautical miles.

Meanwhile the following conversation has bee disclosed as yet:

Control tower’s first warning: You are getting away from the runway.

Pilot’s response: We can see the runway.

Control tower’s second warning: Turn to your left immediately, you are heading towards Margalla Hills.

Pilot’s response: We can see that.

This was the last reply form the pilot and then the flight lost its contact with the control tower and soon after it crashed.

Read more of this post