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On 16 January 2017 a cargo plane flying from Hong Kong to Istanbul crash landed just
outside the main airport for Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
As well as all four crew members, at least 33 people on the ground were killed. Locals said entire
families had been wiped out in the disaster.
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The images are horrific, but it's reassuring to known accidental plane crashes in residential areas are
incredibly rare, a fact largely attributable to pilot training.
"The rules of flying in an emergency are first you aviate, then you navigate, then you communicate,"
says Greg Waldron, Asia managing editor at Flight Global.
A skilled pilot with the right information can avert a major disaster
In other words, the pilot's priority is keeping the plane in the air, then working out the route, then
telling everyone what's going on, though all of this can happen very quickly.
"Pilots will always avoid coming down in a civilian area if they can, but situations during these instances
can be very intense and hectic," says Mr Waldron.
"A lot will depend on how much control they have over the aircraft."
This was the case, for example, with Chesley Sullenberger, aka Sully, who was flying an Airbus 320 over
New York in January 2009 when its engines were disabled by a bird strike.
He made the quick calculation that he could not risk diverting to a nearby airport, as the plane could
come down on populated areas, and so landed in the middle of the Hudson River.
After an investigation, he was judged to have made the right decision, which saved the lives of 155
people on board and possibly numerous more on the ground.
Air disasters timeline
'A golden era of aircraft safety'
A similar incident in Taiwan in February 2015 saw a TransAsia flight crashing in a river in the middle
of Taipei. Dramatic images showed the plane narrowly missing cars on a busy bridge as it came down.
Forty-three people died.
It was later discovered that one engine had malfunctioned and the crew accidentally shut down the
working engine instead. It remains unclear whether the river landing was pilot skill or chance, says Mr
Waldron.
These incidents happened in daytime and in good flying conditions, but the situation can be very
different if flying at night, as the Turkish airline crew were this week, he says.
The two-man crew of a Bombardier freighter which crashed in Norway in 2016, experienced "spatial
disorientation" after getting confusing technical readings about their height and speed while flying at
night, the official investigation found.
They did the right thing but, "guided by the erroneous information", flew straight into a mountain,
killing them both.
'Flying is safe'
The Kyrgyzstan government has been quick to blame the Bishkek crash on pilot error, but with debris
still strewn across the ground, it's far too soon to make that assessment, says Mr Waldron.
Studying the plane's flight deck recorder black box data will be crucial to finding out what the crew was
going through and how it could be avoided in the future.
But Mr Waldron is keen to stress that despite the horror of such catastrophes, flying remains an
extremely safe mode of transport.
On 30 June 2015, an Indonesian Hercules military plane crashed in a densely populated area shortly
after taking off from Medan airport in northern Sumatra.
Most of those killed were on board, but at least 17 people died on the ground.
Medan had had a similar disaster 10 years before, when a Boeing 737 crashed after taking-off from
Polonia airport. Nearly 50 local residents died. A hundred passengers and crew died, though there were
some survivors.
Brazzaville, Congo
In November 2012 an Ilyushin-76 cargo plane hit trees on landing at Maya-Maya airport in Brazzaville,
the capital of the Republic of Congo.
The plane careered off the runway into nearby buildings before plunging into a ravine. Most of the 32
people who died were on the ground.
In March 2011, 14 people died on the ground, along with nine on board, when a cargo plane fell on a
residential area in Pointe-Noire, also in Congo.
Lagos, Nigeria
A Dana Air plane carrying 153 people crashed into buildings in the Nigerian capital in June 2012
after an engine failure.
Everyone on board died, while the final death toll among non-passengers was 10.
Mexico
On 4 November 2008, a light aircraft carrying Mexican Interior Minister Juan Camilo Mourino among its
nine passengers crashes in the financial district of Mexico City. Seven people died on the ground.
New York, US
American Airlines Flight 587 broke up mid-air after taking off from New York JFK airport in November
2001. It came down on houses on the borough of Queens, causing a fire which burned several homes.
As well as 251 passengers and crew, five people died on the ground in the second-worst aviation
disaster in US history. Despite fears it had been a terror attack, the investigation blamed pilot error.
Kyrgyzstan plane crash: Dozens die as Turkish cargo jet hits homes
16 January 2017
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