logo
How pilots cutting engines sparked TWO plane disasters after South Korea & India crashes as calls for cockpit CCTV grow

How pilots cutting engines sparked TWO plane disasters after South Korea & India crashes as calls for cockpit CCTV grow

The Suna day ago
PILOTS manually cutting the engines were to blame for the two most deadly air crashes of this decade, investigations suggest.
With a total of 420 lives lost in the flick of three buttons, urgent questions are swirling about what can be done to reduce the risk of pilot error or sabotage.
8
8
8
8
The Jeju Air emergency-landing crash killed 179 people in December, and 241 people died when the Air India plane came down shortly after takeoff in June.
Investigators have sensationally revealed there is "clear evidence" that the Jeju Air pilots mistakenly shut down the wrong engine after a bird strike.
The plane was then forced to make an emergency landing at Muan International Airport on December 29, where it slammed into a concrete wall and burst into a fireball.
Meanwhile, the leading theory in the Air India crash is that the pilot manually flipped both guarded fuel switches to the 'cut-off' position — a move aviation experts say could only have been deliberate.
A report from the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau of India (AAIB) revealed a recording of the panicked co-pilot asking which the main pilot shut off the engines.
Terry Tozer, former airline pilot and author of "Confessions of an Airline Pilot – Why Planes Crash", told The Sun that it would have been be possible for the Air India pilot to shut off the engines without the other noticing.
In the cockpit were Captain Sumeet Sabharwal and First Officer Clive Kunder.
Terry said: "The handling pilot, which we know was the First Officer, would have had his hands full.
"He would have had his hands on the controls, but the monitoring pilot [Sumeet] would have his hands free."
"There is absolutely no procedure or logical reason why you would shut the engines off just after takeoff. That's so blindingly obvious that it doesn't need to be stated.
"So either it happened by accident, which I think a lot of people find extremely hard to believe or it was done deliberately."
Terry said that the switches are "latched", meaning you have to lift them up before you can move them.
Despite the safety mechanism, Terry said it would 'probably' have been possible for one pilot to shut down the engines without the monitoring pilot noticing, because the switches "would be kind of behind his natural line of sight".
The experience pilot also called on investigators to release a key piece of evidence that could clear up what happened in India.
8
8
He explained the area microphone on the cockpit voice recorder would have picked up the sound of the switches being flicked.
Terry said: 'So it would have been helpful if the investigators had said whether or not they were able to tell whether a switch type sound was detectable around about the time that they think the switches might have been switched off.'
Speaking about the Jeju crash, Terry said the pilots "obviously" shut down the wrong engine by "mistake" - but revealed they would have been contending with a chaos in the cockpit.
He said: 'They probably would have had all kinds of bells and whistles going off and lots of indications that both engines were in trouble.'
The former pilot said "takes time to analyze whether or not you should shut down one or neither or both" - but this was time the Jeju pilots did not have.
He also said the new revelations about those crucial moments had been revealed in a "very odd manner".
Terry said: "I understand that it was released to the relatives of the victims and in private, prior to release to the general public.
"And then that causes riots and chaos."
8
8
However, Terry said that whatever happened in the two cockpits, there is one factor that determines passengers' fate above all else.
He said the 'single most important thing' in passenger safety is the "airline culture".
Terry explained: 'If it is a disciplined professional safety culture with a good training regime, then that makes a huge difference.'
Terry recalled a similar occasion when the wrong engine was shut down - the Kegworth air disaster of 1989 - and said that was "definitely a cultural problem in the training department'.
'That may have been a factor with Jeju Air,' he said.
In the wake of the two tragedies, many aviation figures have called for he introduction of cockpit CCTV.
That would clear up immediately how the two engines came to be shut off on the Air India flight - but Terry said pilots would push back.
He said: 'I can see why the investigators might welcome cockpit CCTV.
"We should be doing everything we can to minimize crashes.
'And in any responsible environment, with a good airline and a regulatory environment that is already happening.
"And obviously, if there was a video evidence of what went on on the cockpit. They would know the answers pretty clearly by now.
"But it's something that I think pilots would resist, for the simple reason that they're already scrutinized, trained, checked, examined, monitored, regulated so much."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fuel switches were not faulty, says Air India, adding to pilot blame
Fuel switches were not faulty, says Air India, adding to pilot blame

Telegraph

time6 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Fuel switches were not faulty, says Air India, adding to pilot blame

Fuel switches were 'not at fault' for the crashed Air India flight, the airline said on Tuesday, adding to mounting evidence the pilots killed in the crash were to blame. Air India found no problems with the locking mechanism of the fuel control switch of all Boeing 787 and 737 aircraft in its fleet, the spokesman said. The captain of the crashed jet is likely to have cut off the fuel supply before it went down in Ahmedabad, US officials believe. The first officer, who was flying the Boeing 787-9, questioned why the captain had moved switches to the cut-off position, according to a US assessment of the black box data. He reportedly expressed surprise and panic while the captain remained calm, the Wall Street Journal reported. All but one of 242 people on board the Boeing 787 Dreamliner were killed when the aircraft plunged into a medical student hostel in a built-up suburb last month, less than a minute after take-off from Ahmedabad airport. In response to the tragedy, India's aviation regulator ordered airlines to check fuel switches on Boeing jets after a preliminary report released by Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau found that switches controlling fuel flow to the jet's two engines were turned off, leading to a catastrophic loss of thrust at take-off. The switches were moved in succession, one second apart, according to the report. Some 10 seconds later, the switches were turned back on. The report did not say whether the switches may have been turned off accidentally or deliberately. The findings explain why the jet's emergency-power generator, known as a ram air turbine, appeared to have been activated moments before it plummeted to the ground. While the initial report does not draw any conclusion, it has raised questions about the actions of Sumeet Sabharwal, the lead pilot, and Clive Kundar, the co-pilot, who had more than 19,000 hours of flying time between them. In the moments before the disaster, Captain Sabharwal, 56, issued a mayday call. However, after the aircraft reached a maximum altitude of barely 400ft above the runway all contact was lost. The plane then glided down towards the ground and crashed into an explosion of fire. The Telegraph previously revealed that Air India crash investigators were examining the medical records of Mr Sabharwal amid claims that he suffered from depression and mental health problems. Captain Sabharwal had been considering leaving the airline to look after his elderly father following the death of his mother in 2022. The crash was the first fatal accident involving Boeing's Dreamliner. However, the airline had already suffered reputational damage after a string of safety and quality problems. The Dreamliner, which entered service in 2011, is popular among commercial airlines and is commonly used on international long-haul routes.

Air India plane skids off runway as three tyres burst on landing at Mumbai
Air India plane skids off runway as three tyres burst on landing at Mumbai

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Air India plane skids off runway as three tyres burst on landing at Mumbai

An Air India plane has skidded off a runway and burst three of its tyres as it landed in Mumbai. The plane, an Airbus A320, suffered damage to the underside of an engine, forcing the runway at Mumbai International Airport to shut down amid heavy rain in the region. Air India flight AI2744, which had flown from the Indian city of Kochi, lost control and veered off the airport's main runway onto an unpaved area before stopping on a taxiway. Photos of the plane showed significant damage to the outermost part of the plane's engine, as well as clumps of wet grass lodged into its wing. A spokesperson for Air India said: 'Flight AI2744, operating from Kochi to Mumbai on 21 July 2025, experienced heavy rain during landing, resulting in a runway excursion after touchdown. 'The aircraft taxied safely to the gate and all passengers and crew members have since disembarked. The aircraft has been grounded for checks. 'The safety of passengers and crew remain our top priority.' Mumbai International Airport said in a statement that its primary runway suffered 'minor damages' during the incident. The airport said a backup runway has now been 'activated' to allow planes to arrive and depart. Air India is already facing heavy scrutiny following the release of a preliminary report into the deadly crash of one of its Boeing 787 Dreamliners in the Indian city of Ahmedabad last month, killing 260 people. Just one person, British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, 40, who was sitting in seat 11A, managed to walk away alive, only suffering cuts to his face and some chest injuries. A further 19 people were killed after the plane collided into a densely populated part of the city. The 15-page report revealed that the switches controlling fuel supplied to the plane's engines were in the 'cutoff' position, instead of the 'run' position. The report read: 'The Engine N1 and N2 began to decrease from their take-off values as the fuel supply to the engines was cut off.' Vishwash's family said he is still haunted by nightmares where he sees 'everyone die.' He is reportedly wracked with guilt as he faces the reality of being the only person out of 242 passengers and crew to survive the crash after the jetliner slammed into the ground and burst into flames. He struggles to sleep at night, according to a member of his extended family, Krunal Keshave, 24, from Leicester. 'He sleeps but doesn't sleep properly. When he sleeps, he dreams he is on the flight. He remembers seeing everyone die in front of his eyes.' The miracle survivor previously said he feels 'terrible' he could not save his brother Ajay, 35, and feels tormented with guilt over his death. The pair ran a fishing business in Diu, India and would live there during the fishing season - which begins in September and ends in May - then would return to Leicester for the off-season. 'He sees him speaks but he doesn't speak about the crash. He is currently trying to have a normal life, but he is not going out too much. He is spending time at home with the family. He was living in the house in Diu with his brother before the crash,' Krunal told The Sunday Times. Another relative said: 'He feels guilty that he is the only one to have lived when everybody else, including his brother, died. It's a lot to live with.' The 40-year-old told The Sun: 'It's a miracle I survived. I am OK physically but I feel terrible that I could not save Ajay.' Vishwash had tried to book two seats next to each other on flight AI171, which crashed into a densely populated part of the city of Ahmedabad shortly after takeoff. But by the time he came to make the reservation, he was forced to pick two seats apart from each other in row 11. Vishwash said: 'If we had been sat together we both might have survived. 'I tried to get two seats together but someone had already got one. Me and Ajay would have been sitting together.

F-35B in Kerala: UK fighter jet stuck in India for five weeks leaves for Australia
F-35B in Kerala: UK fighter jet stuck in India for five weeks leaves for Australia

BBC News

time21 hours ago

  • BBC News

F-35B in Kerala: UK fighter jet stuck in India for five weeks leaves for Australia

A state-of-the-art British fighter jet that had been stuck at an Indian airport for more than five weeks is now airborne and on its way to Darwin in F-35B was pulled back from the hangar on Monday after it was deemed fit to fly, an airport spokesman told the jet first landed on 14 June at Thiruvananthapuram airport in the southern state of Kerala where it was diverted after it ran into bad weather during a sortie in the Indian Ocean. It then developed a technical prolonged presence on Indian soil sparked curiosity and raised questions about how such a modern aircraft could remain stranded in a foreign country for so long. The plane was part of the fleet of HMS Prince of Wales. Officials have not said why it was flying to Darwin, but it's most likely because the Royal Navy's flagship carrier is still in the the past few days, HMS Prince of Wales has been posting updates and photos on X (formerly Twitter) from the joint exercises it has been conducting off the coast of the plane was unable to return, engineers from the ship had visited it to fix they were unable to repair it, and a fortnight back, the UK ministry of defence said they had deployed a team of 14 engineers "to Thiruvananthapuram airport to assess and repair the F-35B aircraft".The curious case of the British jet stuck in IndiaThere had been speculation that if the technicians failed to repair the aircraft, it would have to be dismantled and carried out in a bigger cargo plane such as a C-17 Globemaster transport the past two weeks - including on Monday - the UK high commission in India and the defence authorities responded to the BBC's messages saying they would not share details of repairs.F-35Bs are highly advanced stealth jets, built by Lockheed Martin, and are prized for their short take-off and vertical landing of the "lonely F-35B", parked on the tarmac and soaked by the Kerala monsoon rains, made it a subject of jokes and memes with many suggesting that it did not want to leave the scenic state of Kerala, described as "God's own country" in tourism case of the stranded $110m (£80m) jet was also raised in the House of BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store