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CONTINGENCY SITUATIONAL REPORT (SITREP)
SITREP 004//20 March 1400UTC

SECURITY:   

Please be advised that the FAA has published following NOTAMs for the
Middle East.  U.S Department of State is currently contacting
regional civil aviation authorities to publish similar NOTAMs in
their advisory systems. 

A0024/03 - IRAQ/MIDDLE EAST ADVISORY. ATTENTION U.S. OPERATORS: THIS
NOTICE IS EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY AND WILL REMAIN IN EFFECT UNTIL
FURTHER NOTICE. COALITION MILITARY FORCES MAY OPERATE THROUGHOUT THE
MIDDLE EAST AND THE AIRSPACE ABOVE THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA, RED
SEA, GULF OF ADEN, ARABIAN SEA, GULF OF OMAN, AND THE ARABIAN GULF.
THE TIMELY AND ACCURATE IDENTIFICATION OF CIVIL AIRCRAFT IN THESE
AREAS IS CRITICAL TO AVOID THE INADVERTENT USE OF FORCE AGAINST CIVIL
AIRCRAFT. COALITION MILITARY FORCES ARE PREPARED TO EXERCISE SELF-
DEFENSE MEASURES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO ENSURE THEIR SAFETY IN THE
EVENT THEY ARE APPROACHED BY UNIDENTIFIED AIRCRAFT (FIXED, ROTARY
WING AND ULTRA LIGHT VEHICLES). COALITION FORCES ARE PREPARED TO
RESPOND DECISIVELY TO ANY HOSTILE ACTS OR INDICATIONS OF HOSTILE
INTENT. IN ADDITION, THE TERRITORIAL AIRSPACE OF IRAQ IS CLOSED TO
ALL NON-COALITION AIRCRAFT, EXCEPT CENTRAL COMMAND AUTHORIZED
MEDICAL, FIREFIGHTING, RESCUE/RECOVERY AND HUMANITARIAN FLIGHTS,
UNTIL FURTHER

NOTICE. AIRCRAFT ENTERING THIS AIRSPACE DO SO AT THEIR OWN RISK.

THIS NOTICE IS ALSO PROVIDED TO ENSURE THE SAFETY OF COALITION FORCES
AND THEIR FACILITIES. ALL AIRCRAFT OR FLIGHT ACTIVITIES THAT ARE
DETERMINED TO BE THREATS TO COALITION FORCES MAY BE SUBJECT TO
INTERCEPTION, QUARANTINE, DISABLING OR DESTRUCTION. THIS INCLUDES
AIRCRAFT WITHIN IRAQI TERRITORIAL AIRSPACE AND GROUND-BASED ASSET AND
ACTIVITIES THROUGHOUT IRAQ WITHOUT REGARD TO REGISTRY. IN ADDITION,
ALL AIRCRAFT APPROACHING COALITION NAVAL FORCES ARE ADVISED TO
MAINTAIN RADIO CONTACT ON BRIDGE-TO-BRIDGE CHANNEL 16, INTERNATIONAL
AIR DISTRESS (121.5 MHZ), OR MILITARY AIR DISTRESS (243.0 MHZ UHF).

 

Wiring fire downed Swissair MD-11 jet in 1998.
Reuters

 

2 September 1998; Swissair MD11; near Halifax, Canada: The aircraft was on a nonstop flight from New York's JFK airport to Geneva, Switzerland. The aircraft crashed at night in the Atlantic Ocean close to shore about 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Halifax, Nova Scotia. All 15 crew members and 214 passengers were killed.


HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (Reuters) - The fire that downed a Swissair jet off the coast of Nova Scotia in 1998 was likely caused by a spark among miles of wire in the plane's entertainment system, Canadian investigators said on Thursday. But the investigators, wrapping up a 4-1/2 year probe into the accident, could not definitively say which wire was involved and said there was little the crew could have done to land the plane safely.

All 229 people aboard the McDonell Douglas MD-11 were killed when the Swissair flight, bound for Geneva from New York, crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on Sept. 2, 1998.

More than 250 kilometers (155 miles) of wire were installed on the plane, and investigators looked at some 2 million pieces of plane recovered from the seabed to determine the cause of the crash. Some 98 percent of the airplane by weight was recovered from wreckage 55 meters below the ocean surface.

"It's important to emphasize here, it is unlikely that this entertainment system power supply wire was the only wire involved in the lead arcing event," said Vic Gerden, lead investigator at the
Transportation Safety Board of Canada.

"We strongly suspect that at least one other wire was involved... However we were unable to identify or place any of the arced wires in the area where we believe the fire originated."

Arcing occurs when an electrical current jumps between two wires or a wire and another surface. The spark can ignite.

The board, which does not determine liability or assign blame, said its probe had cost C$57 million ($39 million) and was the most complex investigation it had ever undertaken.

In the flight's final moments, the pilots reported smoke in the cockpit and dumped fuel before trying to reach Halifax for an emergency landing, 53 minutes after departure.

The fire started in a hidden area above the cockpit ceiling when electrical wire arcing ignited the cover material, made of thermal insulation blankets, the board said.

"This set off an in-flight fire that spread and increased in intensity until it led to the loss of the aircraft and human life," the board said.

It said aircraft certification standards for material flammability at the time of the accident were "inadequate."

The plane had no smoke or fire detection devices, nor suppression equipment in the area where the fire started -- although there were no regulations at the time that called for this equipment. By the
time the flight crew realized the plane was in trouble, the fire had become uncontrollable.

But the board said there was nothing the pilots could have done to prevent the crash because a number of the aircraft systems failed simultaneously.

"We have concluded that, even if the pilots could have foreseen the eventual deterioration due to the fire, because of the rapid progression of the fire, they would not have been able to complete a safe landing in Halifax," said Gerden.

The safety board, in its 338-page report, added nine safety recommendations to those in an interim report, urging tests and standards for flammability for all insulation materials on commercial jets.

It called for measures to improve cockpit voice recorders, ensuring that separate generators powered separate recorders so that at least one record would be left if one system failed.

The board had earlier recommended that airlines provide in-flight firefighting equipment and improve power supplies. It said pilots should try to land as soon as there was a sign of smoke or fire, rather than trying to dump fuel.

Families of the victims cheered the board's proposals.

"The most important part of what they've done is make recommendations about safety," said Margie Topf, who lost her older sister Nancy on Swissair Flight 111.

But the International Aviation Safety Association, headed by the widow of a Swissair 111 victim, called for an immediate investigation into the "criminally negligent homicide" of parties "implicated" in the Canadian report, including the United States Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA).

"The bottom line is we've heard a lot of very good recommendations from the TSB and there's absolutely nothing in the law that obligates the FAA or any other regulatory agencies to adopt any of it," said Mark Fetherolf of Palm Beach, Florida, who lost his 16-year-old daughter Tara in the crash.

"For me, there will never be closure to this," he said.

 

Last Hot-Shot at SUMU

Pluna Uruguay B767-300 with more cargo capacity.  

This one also has  significant lower leasing cost . Congratulations Pluna !

 

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