U.S. to help Japan investigate fatal plane collision on airport runway
By Staff Reuters Posted January 4, 2024 6:54 pm Updated January 4, 2024 6:55 pm Share this item on Facebook Share this item via WhatsApp Share this item on Twitter Send this page to someone via emailShare
Share this item on Facebook facebook Share this item on Twitter twitter Send this page to someone via email email Share this item via WhatsApp whatsapp Share this item on Flipboard flipboard Share this item on Reddit redditU.S. aviation safety officials will provide assistance to Japan in the reading of airplane recorders after a deadly collision between a Japan Airlines 9201.T widebody jet and a small Coast Guard plane this week.
National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy told reporters Japan had sought assistance with the Honeywell-manufactured HON.O recorders.
“We will help on that,” she said, adding it is unclear if the recorders will be brought to Washington for analysis or if NTSB personnel will travel to Japan to offer assistance.
All 379 people aboard the Japan Airlines (JAL) Airbus A350 managed to leave the jet after it erupted in flames following Tuesday’s crash with a De Havilland Dash-8 Coast Guard turboprop shortly after landing at Tokyo’s Haneda airport.
Get the latest National news. Sent to your email, every day.A Honeywell spokesperson said it produced the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) used on the Canadian-made Dash-8, but not the flight data recorder (FDR).
Story continues below advertisement ‘It was a miracle’: 379 people escape burning passenger jet in TokyoL3Harris LHX.N produced both recorders for the European planemaker’s A350, according to a 2008 press release. L3 was not immediately available for comment.
Under international rules for aircraft investigations, known throughout the industry by their legal name “Annex 13,” the probe is led by the country where the crash took place, but countries where the planes are manufactured can also participate.
Forensic experts from Airbus and French state agency BAE, along with a representative from Canada’s Transportation Safety Board (TSB) are investigating the accident, which killed five of the six Coast Guard plane crew members.
Japan, which is leading the investigation, can also ask other countries for assistance under international rules.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington, Allison Lampert in Montreal, Valerie Insinna in Washington and Tim Hepher in Paris; Editing by Sandra Maler)
Advertisement- Couple recovers the $4,000 their dog ate in the most disgusting way
- Houthis launch drone to attack ships in Red Sea, hours after warning from Canada and allies
- Iowa school shooting: 17-year-old student named as shooter, 6th grader dead
- Russia is attacking Ukraine with North Korean ballistic missiles, U.S. says