logo
#

Latest news with #ArmyAviationCommand

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends
'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

The Advertiser

time10-05-2025

  • The Advertiser

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date. Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date. Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date. Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date.

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends
'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

Perth Now

time10-05-2025

  • Perth Now

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date.

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends
'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

West Australian

time10-05-2025

  • West Australian

'Someone's gonna die': fatal chopper crash probe ends

Not satisfied with the response to one crash, Captain Danniel Lyon offered a sobering assessment of the Australian army's MRH-90 Taipan helicopter. "Somebody is going to die from this," he said. Months later, Capt Lyon was killed along with three of his colleagues after their Taipan plunged into the sea off Queensland's Lindeman Island. His warning was recalled by his wife Caitland at an inquiry into the July 28, 2023 crash that also claimed the lives of Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph "Phillip" Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs. The inquiry before former judge Margaret McMurdo heard Capt Lyon attended an Australian Defence Force meeting to discuss a Jervis Bay incident when a MRH-90 suffered an engine failure in March 2023, causing it to ditch into the sea. Capt Lyon felt the issues had not been properly rectified, nor had adequate measures been put in place to prevent a similar incident from occurring. He then offered his sadly prophetic assessment. His wife, along with the other victims' families, are now awaiting answers after the fatal crash inquiry concluded in Brisbane after nine hearings and dozens of witnesses over nearly two years. The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Inquiry was formed in October 2023, tasked with examining the cause of the crash and whether the action or inaction of army personnel or others contributed. As the hearings unfolded, concerns emerged among army personnel about the helicopter, the severe fatigue and high workload for pilots, and over the night-vision technology they used. A former Taipan pilot recounted being told that the aircraft had a significant risk of engine failure. The air crew were also briefed on the risk that the MRH-90 would be inescapable if it plunged into water due to such a failure. Crew began flying without gloves to have a better chance of removing themselves if the craft crashed into water, the ex-pilot said. Multiple witnesses said the MRH-90 was not fit to be in service due to the engine-failure risks and high maintenance requirements. It would later be discontinued in favour of the US-made Black Hawks. Major General Stephen Jobson said the MRH-90 was an "immature and under-performing system" that had a high level of risk management since its acquisition in 2007. The Army Aviation Command's former commanding officer said he was never comfortable with the safety risk of the Taipan, but strong efforts were made to eliminate or at least minimise it. Issues with the pilots' TopOwl night-vision helmets were also raised, with an internal army assessment finding a fault left an "unacceptable risk". The assessment, made four years before the crash, found there was an "unacceptable ambiguity" with the helmet technology. It meant there was the potential for a crash when a pilot looked away from the helicopter front windscreen or the axis at night or in difficult terrain conditions, the inquiry heard. There were claims army aviation was dissatisfied with the assessment's findings and wanted the software upgrade to be rolled out despite calls for further analysis. Issues with fatigue and workload in the months leading up to the crash were also raised, with a colleague of the late air crew claiming they were working 12 to 18 hours a day on weekdays and four to six hours on weekends. A MRH-90 pilot said the culture was becoming "toxic", with defence headquarters not recognising the impact of fatigue or the need for time off. In the days before the crash, which happened at the military training event Talisman Sabre, the female pilot said air crew were offered sleeping tablets after the ground trial to help them switch from day to night shifts. She left the training exercise due to fatigue and her struggle with career pressures and a lack of progression. The inquiry heard the final text messages she exchanged with her colleague and friend Capt Lyon. "There is a weird vibe now you've gone," Capt Lyon texted before his final flight. "I hope you have fun tonight," the pilot replied. She was informed the following day there had been a fatal crash, frantically texting Capt Lyon: "F*** f*** f*** please msg me when you guys have phones." She never received a response. She was one of many colleagues and family members of the deceased who broke down while giving evidence. Capt Lyon's wife Caitland tearily recalled the day she broke the news of his death to their son. "I'm still haunted by the sound of our five-year-old's screams the day that I told him daddy wasn't coming home," she told the final hearing. Their daughter was just 16 months old when her father died but now cries for her daddy to come back from heaven, Ms Lyon added. "My heart shatters knowing she has lived more days crying for daddy than she ever had laughing with him," she said. Lt Nugent's partner, Chadine Whyte, spoke of how much he wanted to become a father and her feeling of devastation that he would never be able to realise that dream, urging the defence force to do better. "While I understand that in operational environments, risk is inevitable, we must never lose sight of the fact that behind every uniform is a person, and behind every person is a family, a life and a future," she said. "Max's life mattered and so does the loss of it." The final hearing finished on Friday with Ms McMurdo's findings to be handed down at an undetermined date.

Iraq Receives First Two French Caracal Helicopters
Iraq Receives First Two French Caracal Helicopters

Iraq Business

time02-05-2025

  • Business
  • Iraq Business

Iraq Receives First Two French Caracal Helicopters

By John Lee. French firm Airbus has delivered the first two Caracal military helicopters to Iraq under a defence contract signed between the two countries. The Iraqi Ministry of Defence confirmed receipt of the aircraft on Wednesday, 30 April 2025. Speaking at the handover ceremony, Defence Minister Thabet Muhammad Saeed Al-Abbasi highlighted the strength of the partnership between Iraq and France, stating that the helicopters will bolster Army Aviation Command's capabilities. Additional units will be delivered in phases as production is completed. The Caracal helicopters-renowned for their versatility in combat and all-weather conditions-are expected to enter operational service in June, coinciding with the anniversary of the Army Aviation Command's founding. Minister Al-Abbasi also took part in a test flight operated by Iraqi pilots and praised their swift adaptation and readiness to integrate the advanced aircraft into the Iraqi Armed Forces. The Defence Ministry reaffirmed its commitment to modernising Iraq's military arsenal through continued cooperation with international partners. (Source: Ministry of Defence)

Iraq receives first batch of France's Caracal aircraft
Iraq receives first batch of France's Caracal aircraft

Iraqi News

time01-05-2025

  • Business
  • Iraqi News

Iraq receives first batch of France's Caracal aircraft

In a significant step toward strengthening its military capabilities, the Iraqi Ministry of Defense has officially received the first batch of two French-made Caracal helicopters. The delivery comes as part of a defense agreement between the Iraqi and French Ministries of Defense. At a ceremony marking the occasion, Iraq's Minister of Defense, Thabet Al-Abbasi, highlighted the deepening partnership between Iraq and France. He noted that the acquisition of the Caracal helicopters is part of a broader agreement aimed at equipping the Iraqi Army Aviation Command with advanced aircraft, which will be delivered in phases upon completion of their production. Al-Abbasi announced that the newly received helicopters are expected to be operational by June, aligning with the anniversary of the Army Aviation Command's founding. Photo: Iraqi Ministry of Defense The Caracal is regarded as a proficient aircraft in the globe, noted for its versatility in combat missions and ability to execute in adverse weather and terrain situations. The delivery underscores Iraq's ongoing commitment to modernizing its military infrastructure through international partnerships. The Ministry of Defense continues to pursue agreements that bring the latest military technologies and weaponry to Iraq, reflecting a broader strategy to bolster national defense and enhance the operational readiness of its armed forces.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store