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View Full Version : Thank God for the FAA-


Navaron
2003-05-09, 09:35 PM
I feel so bad for those poor people-
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/World/ap20030509_1209.html

KINSHASA, Congo May 9 �
The rear door of a cargo plane burst open over Congo, hurling more than 120 soldiers, their wives and children to their deaths while others survived by clinging to the aircraft as it returned to the airport, officials said Friday.

The plane, a Russian-built Ilyushin 76, lost its door at 33,000 feet about 45 minutes after takeoff Thursday night from Kinshasa, the capital of the central African nation, said government spokesman, Kikaya Bin Karubi.





Seven people were confirmed dead and military helicopters were searching the region for more casualties, the spokesman said. Karubi did not provide details but confirmed that those who died had been "ejected from the plane."

Two officials at the airport in Kinshasa separately told The Associated Press that at least 129 people were feared dead. Survivors described being battered by swirling baggage and cargo as the cabin lost pressure.

"They were traumatized," said Kabamba Mbwebwe, a doctor who treated victims. "The door opened and the plane depressurized. Many were sucked out."

The flight crew managed to fly the plane back to the capital, where it could be seen the next day on the tarmac, missing a door.

Nine survivors were treated for minor injuries and psychological trauma at Kinshasa General Hospital.

It was not known how many people were on the plane or whether they had seats or seatbelts. People in Africa often travel on modified cargo planes that have few seats, leaving most passengers to cram in among their belongings in the rear of the aircraft.

The privately owned plane apparently had been chartered to transport Congolese soldiers and their families from Kinshasa to the southeastern city of Lubumbashi, a diamond center. Soldiers regularly provide security in Congo cities, often traveling as a group between assignments.

It was not immediately known why the door came open. The weather was clear. There were no suggestion of sabotage.

The plane's owner was not immediately identified. The logo says "Ukrainian Cargo Airlines."

The Ilyushin 76 is a medium- to long-range transport jet. The model was first flown in 1971. It is widely used around the world, particularly in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, as a civilian carrier.

The plane has had a checkered safety record, including 47 accidents that resulted in 668 deaths, according to the Aviation Safety Network Web site, an air safety data base.

On Feb. 19, an Ilyushin 76 crashed in bad weather in Iran, killing 275 people, including more that 200 elite Iranian soldiers. A month earlier, another of the jets crashed while landing in thick fog in East Timor, killing all six people on board.

Kinshasa residents still have painful memories of a plane disaster on Jan. 6, 1996 that left as many as 1,000 people killed when a Russian-built Antonov crashed into a crowded market at the end of a runway near a Kinshasa airport.

Congo is in the fifth year of a civil war that has led to more than 2.5 million deaths, aid groups estimate, mostly from strife-related hunger or illness. Despite a series of peace deals, fighting persists in the northeast.

OmnipotentKiwi
2003-05-09, 09:40 PM
I was just about to post that...

I can't believe one guy survived the fall from 33,000 feet.

ObnoxiousFrog
2003-05-09, 09:58 PM
Damn. That is sad. :tear:

Squeeky
2003-05-09, 10:34 PM
Originally posted by OmnipotentKiwi
I was just about to post that...

I can't believe one guy survived the fall from 33,000 feet.


Indeed very sad, But how on earth can a guy survive a fall from that altitude :confused:

OmnipotentKiwi
2003-05-09, 10:36 PM
Terminal velocity and implulse. I would explain it, but you don't want to hear it. Obviously though, it is possible. ;)

AztecWarrior
2003-05-09, 10:46 PM
It's sad. More so, they are trusting a Soviet plane.

Navaron
2003-05-09, 11:21 PM
It's not the manufacturing that is the problem, it's the shitty ass ICAO standards they were using most likely (if using any).

Tobias
2003-05-10, 11:35 AM
The Soviets have built some very nice stuff, and theirs costs far less to produce and maintain. Dont hate.

d3ath4u
2003-05-10, 12:50 PM
:confused: OmnipotentKiwi, i dont understand how he could survive, please enlighten me. :)

Squeeky
2003-05-10, 02:50 PM
Originally posted by d3ath4u
:confused: OmnipotentKiwi, i dont understand how he could survive, please enlighten me. :)

Kinetic Dampeners

OmnipotentKiwi
2003-05-10, 03:26 PM
:rofl: Anyhow, impact damage is based on two things: how much force is put on the body, and how long the body "feels" the impact. Basically, the longer it takes for the force to be exerted on the body, the less amount of pressure that will be felt, and the less damage it will do. If he was literally attatched to something that would collapse like an accordian on impact, he would actually be able to survive, and that is most likely what happened. Also, there is terminal velocity, so even through he fell from 33,000 feet, there was probably a point where he stopped accelerating.