Monday, August 2, 2010
‘Black box’ recovered from Pakistan crash site
Policemen and soldiers worked through heavy rain to search for bodies and the flight data recorder at the site of the Airblue plane crash in Islamabad’s Margalla Hills on July 29, 2010.
Pakistani investigators found today the data recorder from AirBlue flight 202, which crashed in heavy rain near Islamabad this week killing all 152 people onboard, officials said.
The Airbus 321 crashed on Wednesday into a steep and heavily wooded hillside overlooking the capital shortly before landing after a flight from the southern port city of Karachi.
“It (the data recorder) has been recovered from the scene, from the tail of the plane,” Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters near the site of the crash.
The Director General of the Civil Aviation Authority, Junaid Ameen, told the private television channel Geo that both the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder – the so-called “black box” – had been found.
Thick fog and rainy weather are considered the most likely reasons for the worst aviation accident on Pakistani soil.
While Wednesday’s crash is the worst aviation accident inside Pakistan, the state-owned airline PIA has had worse disasters. In 1979 and 1992, PIA jets crashed in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia and Kathmandu, Nepal, killing 156 and 167 people, respectively.
Within Pakistan, the last major aviation accident was in 2006 when a PIA plane crashed near the central city of Multan killing 45 people.
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