Disaster At least 68 killed in Nepal's worst air crash in 30 years - Posting because the crash was live streamed from a victim's POV

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
Status
Not open for further replies.
1673804243047.png

KATHMANDU: At least 68 people were killed on Sunday (Jan 15) when a domestic flight of Yeti Airlines crashed in Pokhara in Nepal, the country's Civil Aviation Authority said, in the worst air crash in three decades in the small Himalayan nation.

Hundreds of rescue workers scoured the hillside where the flight carrying 72 people from the capital Kathmandu went down. Officials late in the evening called off the search operations for the day, saying they will resume on Monday.

"Thirty bodies have been recovered and sent to hospital," Niroula told Reuters. "Another 14 bodies are still lying at the crash site and authorities are bringing in a crane to move them."

Local TV footage earlier showed rescue workers scrambling around broken sections of the aircraft. Some of the ground near the crash site was scorched, with licks of flames visible.The weather had been clear and there was no immediate indication of what caused the crash.

It was Nepal's deadliest air crash since 1992, the Aviation Safety Network database showed, when a Pakistan International Airlines Airbus A300 crashed into a hillside upon approach to Kathmandu, killing all 167 people on board.

Nearly 350 people have died since 2000 in plane or helicopter crashes in Nepal - home to eight of the world's 14 highest mountains, including Everest - where sudden weather changes can make for hazardous conditions.

The European Union has banned Nepali airlines from its airspace since 2013, citing safety concerns.


The plane on Sunday made contact with Pokhara airport from Seti Gorge at 10.50am (0505 GMT), the country's Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement. "Then it crashed."

At least 68 people were confirmed dead, it said.

"Half of the plane is on the hillside," said Arun Tamu, a local resident, who told Reuters he reached the site minutes after the plane went down. "The other half has fallen into the gorge of the Seti river."

Khum Bahadur Chhetri, another local resident, said he watched from the roof of his house as the flight approached.

"I saw the plane trembling, moving left and right, and then suddenly it nosedived and it went into the gorge," Chhetri told Reuters.

The government has set up a panel to investigate the cause of the crash and it is expected to report within 45 days, the finance minister, Bishnu Paudel, told reporters.

Those on board the twin-engine ATR 72 aircraft included three infants and three children, the Civil Aviation Authority's statement said.

Passengers included five Indians, four Russians and one Irish, two South Korean, one Australian, one French and one Argentine national.

YETI CANCELS FLIGHTS

The journey to Pokhara, Nepal's second largest city tucked under the picturesque Annapurna mountain range, from the capital Kathmandu is one of the Himalayan country's most popular tourist routes, with many preferring a short flight instead of a six-hour-long drive through hilly roads.

A Pokhara Airport spokesman said the aircraft crashed as it approached the airport, adding that the "plane cruised at 12,500 feet (3,810m) and was on a normal descent". The weather on Sunday was clear.

Flight tracking website FlightRadar24 said on Twitter the Yeti Airlines aircraft was 15 years old and equipped with an old transponder with unreliable data. It added that the last signal from the transponder was received at 0512 GMT at an altitude of 2,875 feet above mean sea level.

Pokhara Airport is located at about 2,700-2,800 feet above mean sea level, according to FlightRadar24.

On its website, Yeti describes itself as a leading domestic carrier.

Its fleet consists of six ATR 72-500s, including the one that crashed. It also owns Tara Air, and the two together offer the "widest network" in Nepal, the company says.

Yeti said it had cancelled all its regular flights for Monday in "mourning for the passengers who lost their lives."

The ATR72 of European planemaker ATR is a widely used twin engine turboprop plane manufactured by a joint venture of Airbus and Italy's Leonardo. Yeti Airlines has a fleet of six ATR72-500 planes, according to its website.

"ATR specialists are fully engaged to support both the investigation and the customer," ATR said in a statement.

Airbus and Leonardo did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asi...i-airlines-72-people-pokhara-airports-3207321 (Archive)

 
Last edited:
There’s a new airport at Pokhara and it’s only been open a couple of weeks . I wonder if they somehow got mixed up, or someone gave them incorrect t data to land?
Maybe the pilot wasn't aware and made a mistake, Nepal may be a decently sized country but I doubt most people know about it aside from the himalaya part of it
 
  • Thunk-Provoking
Reactions: IAmNotAlpharius
What the fuck did I just watch. I guess we're hearing some kind of commentary about the video itself ? Otherwise, how the fuck can anyone be this calm while your fucking plane is nose diving and on fire ? Yeah sure dude whatever you did last week-end is pretty chill but you're in the middle of a crash, I'm sure you can stop talking for a second or two.

It's wild how everything suddenly went to shit out of nowhere.
 
I'm so confused by that video; watched it with sound trying to see if it was an explosion or something when it abruptly goes from normal to FIRE, but is the audio a news channel's commentary when watching it or something? It didn't seem like the audio was actually from whatever was happening in the plane.

This is terrible. It's so surreal having an inside view of a plane going down.
 
videos mental. I found a copy with audio. Happens so fast people barely have time to react. poor bastards
Wow, things looked good right up until the seconds before the crash. Either the pilots nose dived into the ground at the last minute, or the plane experienced some kind of catastrophic failure.
 
It looks like the airplane was victim of a microburst on approach assuming there were no mechanical failures. Delta Airlines 191 met an unfortunate fate from that.
That was my thought as well, you can't see too much from the angle of the vid but from what I could see they still had clearance from the ground and weren't in some tailspin dive, no one was acting overly panicked or frightened at first so whatever it was, was very sudden.
 
I mean, aren't you supposed to avoid using electronics during takeoff/landing? To avoid tower interference? I'm not sure that Yeti Airlines would have wi-fi on board especially for a small domestic flight either.
 
videos mental. I found a copy with audio. Happens so fast people barely have time to react. poor bastards


View attachment 4272076

PULL UP! PULL UP! TERRAIN! PULL UP! PULL UP!

I'll patiently await the black box/flight recorder data and the eventual Nepalese equivalent of the Air Traffic Safety report to be released/covered. From watching about 50 plane crashes/near misses on the Mentour Pilot channel my guess is they screwed up their route/altitude when coming in for landing and crashed into the fucking mountain which was probably obscured by low clouds. There are all sorts of proceedures and rules to prevent this but all too often these 2nd world pilots skirt them. Doesn't look like a failure, the cabin has power, masks were not deployed (although I guess they would not at that altitude anyway), nobody is told to brace, etc. Crazy though, visibility isn't even that bad from the looks of it.
 
It looks like the airplane was victim of a microburst on approach assuming there were no mechanical failures. Delta Airlines 191 met an unfortunate fate from that.
That was my thought as well, you can't see too much from the angle of the vid but from what I could see they still had clearance from the ground and weren't in some tailspin dive, no one was acting overly panicked or frightened at first so whatever it was, was very sudden.
Very possible. Nepal has a history of deadly dry derechos. I'm not personally a pilot, but pilots I've spoken to have told me microbursts are pretty tricky to handle, and even experienced pilots have trouble with them, while inexperienced or poorly trained pilots can quickly convert their plane into a lawn dart when unexpectedly faced with one.

It really was very sudden. An engine failure wouldn't do it. The only mechanical failure I can really think of that might cause something like this would be the elevator controls becoming somehow stuck in the nose down position. I don't know what kind of plane this was, but there was an Alaska Airlines flight that lawn darted because of the elevator jackscrew snapping and the elevator instantly slamming and sticking nose down.

Regardless, an honest tragedy. God bless, that's a lot of lost life.
 
I mean, aren't you supposed to avoid using electronics during takeoff/landing? To avoid tower interference? I'm not sure that Yeti Airlines would have wi-fi on board especially for a small domestic flight either.
He must have been connecting to towers because the dude and that plane Wi-Died before the recording did.
 
Many people are laughing seconds before they die because they don't see it coming. It's not as odd as you would think.

Things like this often happen in Asia. Either 1. their flight infrastructure is shit, 2. their pilots are overworked, or 3. there is some sort of Bermuda Triangle shit under that region.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back