Pilot in Beirut crash didn’t follow tower’s advice

January 26, 2010 05:49 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 07:08 am IST - BEIRUT

A Lebanese marine commando carries part of the wing of the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 at the public beach of Ramlet al-Baida, in Beirut, Lebanon, on Tuesday.

A Lebanese marine commando carries part of the wing of the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 at the public beach of Ramlet al-Baida, in Beirut, Lebanon, on Tuesday.

The pilot of an Ethiopian Airlines plane that crashed into the sea flew in the opposite direction from the path recommended by the control tower after taking off from Beirut in thunderstorms, Lebanon’s transportation minister said on Tuesday.

All 90 people on board were feared dead after the plane went down in flames minutes after takeoff at around 2:30 a.m. Monday, during a night of lightning and thunderstorms.

Transportation Minister Ghazi Aridi said the pilot initially followed the tower’s guidance, but then abruptly changed course and went in the opposite direction.

“They asked him to correct his path but he did a very fast and strange turn before disappearing completely from the radar,” Mr. Aridi told The Associated Press.

It was not immediately clear why the pilot veered off the recommended path. Like most other airliners, the Boeing 737 is equipped with its own onboard weather radar, which the pilot may have used to avoid flying into thunderheads rather than following the flight tower’s recommendation.

“Nobody is saying the pilot is to blame for not heeding orders,” Mr. Aridi said, adding: “There could have been many reasons for what happened. ... Only the black box can tell.”

Lebanese officials have ruled out terrorism or “sabotage” on the flight bound for the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

No survivors had been found more than 24 hours after the crash. Emergency workers have pulled bodies from the sea; the numbers reported so far range from a dozen to more than 20.

Ethiopian Airlines’ CEO Girma Wake said on Tuesday some bodies were probably still in the plane.

“We hope they will find trapped bodies in the fuselage,” Mr. Wake said in Addis Ababa.

Searchers were trying to find the plane’s black box and flight data recorder, which are critical to determining the cause of the crash.

On Tuesday, rescue teams and equipment sent from the U.N. and countries including the United States and Cyprus were helping in the search. Conditions were chilly but relatively clear — far better than Monday, when rain lashed the coast.

Pieces of the plane and other debris were washing ashore, and emergency crews pulled a large piece of the plane, about 3 long, from the water. A crew member, Safi Sultaneh, identified it as a piece of a wing.

An aviation analyst familiar with the investigation said Beirut air traffic control was guiding the Ethiopian flight through the thunderstorms for the first 2-3 minutes of its flight.

The official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter, said this was standard procedure by Lebanese controllers to assist airliners departing from the airport in poor weather conditions.

It is unclear exactly what happened in the last 2 minutes of flight, the official said.

Ethiopian Airlines said late Monday that the pilot had more than 20 years of experience. It did not give the pilot’s name or details of other aircraft the pilot had flown. It said the recovered bodies included those of Ethiopians and Lebanese.

The Lebanese army and witnesses say the plane was on fire shortly after takeoff. A defence official also said some witnesses reported the plane broke up into three pieces.

At the Government Hospital in Beirut, Red Cross workers brought in bodies covered with wool blankets as relatives gathered nearby. Marla Pietton, wife of the French ambassador to Lebanon, was among those on board, according to the French Embassy.

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