Burma grounds planes over safety concerns
Burma has grounded its Chinese-made MA60 planes for
safety checks following two landing incidents involving the aircraft in
the past month, a senior official said on Tuesday.
An MA60 carrying about 60 passengers skidded off a runway at a domestic airport in southern Burma on Monday but nobody was injured. In mid-May, an MA60 overshot the end of a runway at an airport in eastern Shan State, injuring two people.
“I think the accidents happened because of system failure. We will check all the systems. That’s why we stopped the operation of the planes,” Tin Naing Tun, director general of the Civil Aviation Department, told AFP.
“The systems also showed warnings before,” he added.
He said state-owned Myanma Airways operated three turbo-prop MA60 planes.
The same type of aircraft crash-landed at an airport in eastern Indonesia on Monday, leaving two people with minor injuries.
In May 2011, an MA-60 operated by Indonesia’s Merpati Nusantara crashed in West Papua province, killing 25 people.
Following that accident, Indonesian authorities banned the plane – manufactured by Xi’an Aircraft Industrial Corp. – from landing at three airports with difficult approaches.
An MA60 carrying about 60 passengers skidded off a runway at a domestic airport in southern Burma on Monday but nobody was injured. In mid-May, an MA60 overshot the end of a runway at an airport in eastern Shan State, injuring two people.
“I think the accidents happened because of system failure. We will check all the systems. That’s why we stopped the operation of the planes,” Tin Naing Tun, director general of the Civil Aviation Department, told AFP.
“The systems also showed warnings before,” he added.
He said state-owned Myanma Airways operated three turbo-prop MA60 planes.
The same type of aircraft crash-landed at an airport in eastern Indonesia on Monday, leaving two people with minor injuries.
In May 2011, an MA-60 operated by Indonesia’s Merpati Nusantara crashed in West Papua province, killing 25 people.
Following that accident, Indonesian authorities banned the plane – manufactured by Xi’an Aircraft Industrial Corp. – from landing at three airports with difficult approaches.
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