I’m usually bombarded by airline pros claiming automation has eliminated the need for a third crew member.
They are quite right – until something goes terribly wrong. That’s when you need a third pilot. I’d be happy to pay a little more for this extra safety.
This week’s crash in France reminds us that pilot-suicide is not all that uncommon. In 1997, a SilkAir pilot dove his plane into the sea off Singapore. He was suffering severe financial problems and had heavy death insurance.
In 1999, an Egyptair flight from Los Angeles to Cairo dove into the Atlantic, killing 217. US authorities ruled it was suicide-mass murder; Egypt continues to blame the Boeing 767 aircraft, a very safe plane. Pilots in Mozambique and Morocco also crashed their aircraft in 2013 and 1994.
By coincidence, I happen to know the mountain slopes where the Germanwings flight crashed at 700kph and shattered into fragments. The accident site lies very close to the Col (pass) de Restefond, one of the highest points on the southern arm of the Maginot Line fortress system. The quaint town of Barcelonette, settled in the 19th century by French returning from Mexico – is not far off. I have walked much of this region.
This is the heart of France’s wild, vertiginous Maritime Alps that rise to over 2,800 meters along the border with Italy and are snow-bound for almost half the year. The region is so remote and forbidding that most French have never visited it. Helicopters are necessary to reach the crash scene.
It’s likely German and French investigators will discover some skeletons in the suicide pilot’s private life: drugs, romantic heartbreak, money issues. Such were the causes in previous suicidal air crashes.
I also grieve for Lufthansa, one of the world’s top airlines with great devotion to safety and punctuality. I’d fly Lufthansa tomorrow. I am not so sure about some of Europe’s national carriers. Inevitably, critics will claim the Germanwings crash had something to do with it being a budget carrier. I don’t like them at all, but this awful disaster was a random act of madness that could have been forestalled by a third pilot.
Excerpted from: ‘Terror in the sky’.
Courtesy: Commondreams.org
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