Somali Airlines Flight 40

Somali Airlines Flight 40
The accident aircraft before delivery.
Accident
Date 20 July 1981
Summary Structural failure due to loss of control in extreme turbulence.
Site Balad, Somalia
Aircraft
Aircraft type Fokker F27-600 Friendship
Operator Somali Airlines
Registration 6O-SAY
Flight origin Mogadishu International Airport, Mogadishu, Somalia
Destination Hargeisa International Airport, Hargeisa, Somalia
Passengers 44
Crew 6
Fatalities 50
Survivors 0

Somali Airlines Flight 40 was a scheduled domestic Somali Airlines flight on 20 July 1981 from Mogadishu to Hargeisa in Somalia. The aircraft crashed a few minutes after takeoff, and all 44 passengers and six crew on board were killed.

Flight

On 20 July 1981, Somali Airlines Flight 40, operated by a Fokker F27 Friendship, took off from Mogadishu's Mogadishu International Airport en route to Hargeisa International Airport in Hargeisa. It later returned to the Mogadishu airport for some repairs, before departing a second time.[1] A few minutes after Flight 40 took off again, the aircraft entered an area of heavy rainfall. The aircraft subsequently went out of control and crashed near the town of Balad. All 50 people on board were killed,[2] the most fatalities in a single aircraft crash within Somali airspace.[3]

Investigation

The crash investigation determined that the aircraft had entered a spiral dive after encountering strong vertical gusts. Loads during the dive increased to approximately 5.76 g, exceeding the design stress limits of the Fokker F27 type and causing its right wing to separate.[4] The flight crew were believed to have erred in taking off during known thunderstorm conditions.[5]

References

  1. "49 are killed in Somali crash". St. Joseph News-Press. 20 July 1981. p. 3A.
  2. Aircraft accident Fokker F-27 Friendship 600RF 6O-SAY Balad Plane crash claims 49 in Somalia
  3. ASN Aviation Safety Database Somalia
  4. Aircraft accident Fokker F-27 Friendship 600RF 6O-SAY Balad
  5. Somali Airlines Flight 40 at Airdisaster.com


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