Pakistan International Airlines Flight 268

Pakistan International Airlines Flight 268
The aircraft involved in the accident while still operating with Condor Flugdienst
Accident
Date 28 September 1992 (1992-09-28)
Summary Controlled flight into terrain due to Pilot error, improper Navigation Charts, and Failure of GPWS
Site Kathmandu, Nepal
27°31′58″N 85°17′05″E / 27.53278°N 85.28472°E / 27.53278; 85.28472Coordinates: 27°31′58″N 85°17′05″E / 27.53278°N 85.28472°E / 27.53278; 85.28472
Aircraft
Aircraft type Airbus A300B4-203
Operator Pakistan International Airlines
IATA flight No. PK268
ICAO flight No. PIA268
Call sign PAKISTAN 268
Registration AP-BCP
Flight origin Jinnah International Airport
Destination Tribhuvan International Airport
Occupants 167
Passengers 155
Crew 12
Fatalities 167
Survivors 0

Pakistan International Airlines Flight 268 was an Airbus A300, registration AP-BCP, which crashed on approach to Kathmandu's Tribhuvan International Airport on 28 September 1992. All 167 on board were killed. It is the 100th aviation disaster with more than 100 fatalities and the deadliest aviation crash to occur on Nepalese soil.

Accident

Flight 268 departed Karachi at 11:13 AM Pakistan Standard Time for Kathmandu. Upon contacting Nepalese air traffic control, the aircraft was cleared for an approach from the south called the Sierra approach. An aircraft cleared to use this approach was at the time directed to pass over a reporting point called "Romeo" located 41 miles south of the Kathmandu VOR (or at 41 DME) at an altitude of 15,000 feet. The aircraft was to then descend in seven steps to 5,800 feet, passing over a reporting point known as "Sierra" located at 10 DME at an altitude of 9,500 feet, before landing at Kathmandu. This approach allowed aircraft to pass over the Mahabharat Range directly south of Kathmandu (the crest of which is located just north of the Sierra reporting point) at a safe altitude.

Shortly after reporting at 10 DME, at 2.30 pm the aircraft crashed at approximately 7,300 feet (2,200 m) into the side of the 8,250 ft (2,524 m) mountain at Bhatti Danda, disintegrating on impact, instantly killing all aboard; the tail fin separated and fell into the forest at the base of the mountainside.[1][2][3]

This accident occurred 59 days after Thai Airways International Flight 311 crashed north of Kathmandu.

Causes

Although no pertinent flight deck conversation was recovered from Flight 268's cockpit voice recorder by investigators with the Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB), which assisted with the investigation, data recovered from the flight data recorder by the TSB showed that the aircraft initiated each step of its descent one step too early.[2] At 16 DME the aircraft was a full 1,000 feet below its cleared altitude; at 10 DME (the Sierra reporting point) it was 1,300 feet below its cleared altitude. The aircraft approached the Mahabharat Range at an insufficient altitude and crashed into the south slope.[1] Although the pilots of Flight 268 reported their aircraft's altitude accurately to air traffic control, controllers did nothing to alert them of their inappropriate altitude until seconds before the accident.[2]

Investigators determined that the accident had been caused mainly by pilot error. Visibility was poor due to overcast and the ground proximity warning would not have been triggered in time because of the steep terrain.[2] The approach plates for Kathmandu issued to PIA pilots were also determined to be unclear,[1][2] and Nepalese air traffic controllers were judged timid and reluctant to intervene in what they saw as piloting matters such as terrain separation. [4] The report recommended that ICAO review navigational charts and encourage their standardisation, and that the approach to Kathmandu Airport be changed to be less complex.[2]

Memorials

PIA paid for and maintains the Lele PIA Memorial Park at Lele, at the foot of the mountain where the crash occurred.[5] [6]

The Wilkins Memorial Trust, a UK charitable organisation that provides aid to Nepal, was established in memory of a family killed in the crash.[7]

See also

  1. 1 2 3 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Gero, David (2000). Aviation Disasters: The World's Major Civil Airliner Crashes since 1950 (3rd ed.). Sparkford, nr. Yeovil, Somerset: Patrick Stephens (Haynes). p. 232. ISBN 9781852606022.
  3. McGirk, Tim; Wolmar, Christian (30 September 1992). "Hunt goes on for black box in Airbus wreckage". The Independent.
  4. "Airbus crash blamed on pilot error". The Independent. 1992-09-30. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
  5. Khaliq, Fazal (17 October 2015). "PIA memorial park in Nepal honours 1992 air crash victims". Dawn.
  6. "Air crash relatives arrive in Nepal". The Independent. 1992-10-02. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
  7. "WMT" (PDF). WMT News (pdf). Autumn 2007.
  • Job, Macarthur (1998). Air Disaster. 3. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. (Australia). pp. 98–115. ISBN 1-875671-34-X.
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