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вторник, 12 марта 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Boeing jet is forced to turn around MID-AIR after Britain bans 737 MAX planes

Boeing jets heading for Britain have turned around mid-air after the UK barred 737 Max planes from its airspace following the Ethiopia disaster, it has emerged.


British aviation chiefs made the decision after an Ethiopian Airlines aircraft crashed on Sunday killing all 157 on board - the second disaster involving the Max 8 model in under five months.


As the restrictions were announced this afternoon, two Turkish Airlines aircraft - one bound for Gatwick and the other to Birmingham - turned back while flying over Europe. The carrier has since grounded all 12 Boeing Max planes in its fleet until further notice


Germany, France, Ireland and Iceland all followed suit after Britain's decision today, becoming the latest in a series of countries and airlines to ground their fleets of Boeing's latest 737 aircraft. 


Tui Airways has the only five Max 8 aircraft operated by a UK-based airline, and confirmed the planes have been grounded following the CAA's decision.  


Norwegian Air, the other major operator of Max 8s in the UK, confirmed they too had suspended flights with the jets following a recommendation from European aviation authorities. 


It comes as pressure continues to mount on Boeing after more airlines and countries grounded their fleets of 737 Max 8 jets and as shares in the firm crashed for the second time in two days with $20 billion wiped off the firm's value. 







Boeing jets heading for Britain have turned around mid-air after the UK barred 737 Max planes from its airspace following the Ethiopia disaster, it has emerged. two Turkish Airlines aircraft - one bound for Gatwick and the other to Birmingham - turned back while flying over Europe

















Pressure is mounting on Boeing after more airlines and countries grounded their fleets of 737 Max 8 jets in the wake of the Ethiopian Airlines disaster. Pictured: Emergency crews at the scene of the crash last night


Pressure is mounting on Boeing after more airlines and countries grounded their fleets of 737 Max 8 jets in the wake of the Ethiopian Airlines disaster. Pictured: Emergency crews at the scene of the crash last night



Pressure is mounting on Boeing after more airlines and countries grounded their fleets of 737 Max 8 jets in the wake of the Ethiopian Airlines disaster. Pictured: Emergency crews at the scene of the crash last night





Flight ET302 was seen 'swerving and dipping' before crashing down minutes from take off from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning, killing all 157 on board including nine Britons


Flight ET302 was seen 'swerving and dipping' before crashing down minutes from take off from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning, killing all 157 on board including nine Britons



Flight ET302 was seen 'swerving and dipping' before crashing down minutes from take off from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning, killing all 157 on board including nine Britons



British death toll rises to nine as Foreign Office confirms mother and son were also killed 



Nine Britons were killed in the Ethiopian Airlines flight which crashed yesterday morning - two more than was feared.


The Foreign Office revised up the number of British victims today after discovering that some of them had dual nationality.  


Last night it emerged that British-Somali passengers Sarah Hassan Said and Nasrudin Abdulakir were killed when the Boeing 737 Max 8 jet came down within minutes of take-off from Addis Ababa on Sunday. 


Another British victim was named yesterday as Sam Pegram, a 25-year-old aid worker who grew up in Lancashire. 


Mr Pegram's old secondary school, Penwortham Priory Academy, confirmed their old pupil's death and said he was remembered 'with great fondness'.


In addition to UN worker Joanna Toole, polar expert Sarah Auffet and Joseph Waithaka from Hull, the latest news means that six out of nine British victims have now been named.  




Joanna Toole (pictured) has been named as one of the British victims of the air disaster in Ethiopia


Joanna Toole (pictured) has been named as one of the British victims of the air disaster in Ethiopia






Sarah Auffret (pictured), a French-British dual national, has been identified as a victim of the Ethiopian Airlines flight ET302


Sarah Auffret (pictured), a French-British dual national, has been identified as a victim of the Ethiopian Airlines flight ET302



Briton Joanna Toole (left) and French-British dual national Sarah Auffret (right) have been named among victims of the air disaster in Ethiopia 






Irishman Michael Ryan (pictured) who worked for the UN's World Food Programme was another of the 149 passengers killed


Irishman Michael Ryan (pictured) who worked for the UN's World Food Programme was another of the 149 passengers killed






Kenyan-British dual national Joseph Waithaka, pictured, was killed in the crash on his way home from visiting relatives in Hull


Kenyan-British dual national Joseph Waithaka, pictured, was killed in the crash on his way home from visiting relatives in Hull



Irishman Michael Ryan (pictured left), who worked for the UN's World Food Programme, and Kenyan-British dual national Joseph Waithaka  (right) - who used to live in Hull - were also among the 149 passengers killed 






Nasrudin Abdulkadir died in Sunday's crash


Nasrudin Abdulkadir died in Sunday's crash






Sarah Hassan Said died in Sunday's crash


Sarah Hassan Said died in Sunday's crash



Nasrudin Abdulkadir and his mother Sarah Hassan Said, both Somali-British nationals, died on the doomed plane, the FCO confirmed on Monday evening






Sam Pegram, pictured, was named on Monday as another British victim


Sam Pegram, pictured, was named on Monday as another British victim






Sam Pegram, pictured, went to school in Lancashire


Sam Pegram, pictured, went to school in Lancashire



Sam Pegram, pictured, a 25-year-old aid worker was named on Monday as another British victim of the Ethiopian air disaster


At least 12 passengers, including Ms Toole, from Exmouth, Devon, were travelling to Nairobi for a UN environment gathering.




Spanish national Pilar Martinez Docampo, who died in the crash, was a London-based aid worker who was travelling to Kenya to teach children English


Spanish national Pilar Martinez Docampo, who died in the crash, was a London-based aid worker who was travelling to Kenya to teach children English



Spanish national Pilar Martinez Docampo, who died in the crash, was a London-based aid worker who was travelling to Kenya to teach children English



Meanwhile, it has also emerged that a London-based aid worker who was travelling to Nairobi to teach children English was one of the 157 killed in the Ethiopian Airlines tragedy.


Spanish national Pilar Martinez Docampo, 32, had reportedly been living in London for seven years.


Docampo, from the seaside resort of Cangas do Morrazo in the Spanish province of Pontevedra, had been travelling and working for an unnamed NGO for the first time in Ethiopia.


Local media report Docampo had held several jobs in London after moving there seven years ago to look for work.


Her family told reporters that she had been travelling to Nairobi from Ethiopia to teach English to children as part of her work for the NGO.


She was excited about the trip and was reportedly planning to fly to Mozambique after her stay in Nairobi to teach English as well. 


The local government in her hometown have announced there will be three days of mourning for her. 




Boeing's stock fell 3.2 to $387.10 minutes after the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange today, adding to a 5 per cent decline on Monday. 


Today India's Jet Airways joined airlines in Mexico, Ethiopia, Brazil and South Africa in resolving to keep their Max 8s in hangers pending safety reviews.   


Australia and South Korea have suspended 737 MAX aircraft operations while Singapore issued the same orders at its busy Changi airport. Indonesia grounded its fleets and Vietnam said it would not grant licences for the jet until the cause of Sunday's crash was determined.


In Britain, a spokesperson for the Civil Aviation Authority said: 'As we do not currently have sufficient information from the flight data recorder we have, as a precautionary measure, issued instructions to stop any commercial passenger flights from any operator arriving, departing or overflying UK airspace.

'The UK Civil Aviation Authority's safety directive will be in place until further notice.


'We remain in close contact with the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and industry regulators globally.'  


As the CAA made is announcement today, aircraft tracking maps posted by Flightradar24 showed two Britain-bound Turkish Airlines jets - both 737 Max 8 models - turning back while over mainland Europe. 


The carrier later said it was grounding all Boeing 737 Max aircraft in its fleet until further notice 'uncertainty affecting safety is cleared.' He added that passenger safety was the company's priority. 


Meanwhile a TUI Airways spokesperson said: 'TUI Airways can confirm that all 737 MAX 8 aircraft currently operating in the UK have been grounded following the decision from the UK regulatory authorities today.


'Any customers due to fly home today on a 737 MAX 8 from their holiday will be flown back on another aircraft. Customers due to travel in the coming days will also travel on holiday as planned on other aircraft. 




India's Jet Airways this morning joined airlines in China, Mexico, Ethiopia, Brazil and South Africa in resolving to keep their Max 8s in hangers pending safety reviews. Pictured: A SilkAir plane at Changi Airport after Singapore suspended operations for all Boeing 737 Max 8s at the busy terminal


India's Jet Airways this morning joined airlines in China, Mexico, Ethiopia, Brazil and South Africa in resolving to keep their Max 8s in hangers pending safety reviews. Pictured: A SilkAir plane at Changi Airport after Singapore suspended operations for all Boeing 737 Max 8s at the busy terminal



India's Jet Airways this morning joined airlines in China, Mexico, Ethiopia, Brazil and South Africa in resolving to keep their Max 8s in hangers pending safety reviews. Pictured: A SilkAir plane at Changi Airport after Singapore suspended operations for all Boeing 737 Max 8s at the busy terminal





Three Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes from Shanghai Airlines are pictured at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai. China ordered domestic airlines to suspend commercial operation of the jet model citing the Ethiopian Airlines and Lion Air disasters


Three Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes from Shanghai Airlines are pictured at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai. China ordered domestic airlines to suspend commercial operation of the jet model citing the Ethiopian Airlines and Lion Air disasters



Three Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes from Shanghai Airlines are pictured at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai. China ordered domestic airlines to suspend commercial operation of the jet model citing the Ethiopian Airlines and Lion Air disasters





Britain has banned all Boeing 737 Max aircraft from flying in its airspace following the Ethiopian Airlines disaster om Sunday


Britain has banned all Boeing 737 Max aircraft from flying in its airspace following the Ethiopian Airlines disaster om Sunday



Britain has banned all Boeing 737 Max aircraft from flying in its airspace following the Ethiopian Airlines disaster om Sunday




Countries and carriers around the globe that have grounded 737 Max 8



A growing number of airlines around the world have grounded their Boeing 737 Max 8 jets following the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane that killed 157 people on Sunday.


Here is a list of airlines and countries that have grounded the aircraft so far:


Ethiopia


A spokesman for Ethiopian Airlines says it will ground its remaining four Max 8 jets as an 'extra safety precaution' while it investigates Sunday's deadly crash.


Asrat Begashaw said investigations and the search for bodies and aircraft debris will continue. The airline is awaiting the delivery of 25 more Max 8 jets.


Brazil


Brazil's Gol Airlines has suspended the use of 121 Max 8 jets. The airline said it is following the investigation of the Max 8 closely and hopes to return the aircraft to use as soon as possible.


Gol said it has made nearly 3,000 flights with the Max 8, which went into service last June, with 'total security and efficiency'.


Cayman Islands


Cayman Airways, a Caribbean carrier, said it stopped using its two Max 8 jets starting on Monday. President and CEO Fabian Whorms said the airline is committed to 'putting the safety of our passengers and crew first'.


Mr Whorms said the move will cause changes to flight schedules. Cayman is the flag carrier of Cayman Islands, a British overseas territory. It received its first Max 8 in November and its second earlier this month.


China


China has 96 Max 8 jets in service, belonging to carriers such as Air China, China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The civilian aviation authority directed the planes to be grounded indefinitely on Monday.


It said the order was 'taken in line with the management principle of zero tolerance for security risks'. There were eight Chinese citizens on the Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed shortly after taking off on Sunday. The authority said it will consult the US Federal Aviation Administration and Boeing before deciding when to lift the ban.


India


India's Jet Airways says it is 'in contact with the manufacturer' of Max 8 jets and has grounded five of them starting on Monday.


Indian airline SpiceJet also uses the aircraft, but it is unclear if those planes are grounded.


On Monday, India's aviation watchdog ordered a safety assessment of the aircraft. It also issued safety instructions for flying the Max 8 jet.


Indonesia


Indonesia says it will temporarily ground Max 8 jets to inspect their airworthiness. Director general of Air Transportation Polana B Pramesti said the move was made to ensure flight safety.


A Lion Air model of the same plane crashed in Indonesia in October. Indonesian airlines operate 11 Max 8 jets. Lion Air, which owns 10 of them, said it will try to minimise the impact of the decision on operations. The other Max 8 jet belongs to national carrier Garuda.


Mexico


Mexican airline Aeromexico has suspended flights of its six Max 8 jets after the crash in Ethiopia.


Aeromexico said it 'fully' trusts the safety of its fleet but ordered the grounding to ensure 'the safety of its operations and the peace of mind of its customers'. It said other planes will take over the routes usually flown by the Max 8.


Singapore


Singapore has temporarily banned Max 8 jets - and other models in the Max range - from entering and leaving the country.


The civil aviation authority said it was 'closely monitoring the situation' and the ban will be 'reviewed as relevant safety information becomes available'. It added that it was in close communication with the FAA, Boeing and other aviation authorities.


SilkAir, a regional carrier owned by Singapore Airlines, has six Max 8 jets. It said the ban 'will have an impact on some of the airline's flight schedules'. The authority said flights to Singapore by China Southern Airlines, Garuda Indonesia, Shandong Airlines and Thai Lion Air will also be affected.


South Korea


An Eastar Jet official said that the planes will be replaced by Boeing 737-800 planes from Wednesday on routes to Japan and Thailand.


She said the airline has not found any problems, but is voluntarily grounding Boeing 737 Max 8s in a response to customer concerns. She says the planes will not be used until the completion of a government safety review on the aircraft.


An official from South Korea's Transportation Ministry says it has yet to find any problems from safety reviews on Eastar's planes that started on Monday.


Australia


Australia has suspended all flights into or out of the country by Boeing 737 Max aircraft.


Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority says no Australian airlines operate the aircraft type, but two foreign airlines - SilkAir and Fiji Airways - fly them to Australia.


Director of aviation safety, Shane Carmody, says that because of the two accidents, the temporary suspension of Boeing 737 Max operations is in the best interest of safety.


Oman


The sultanate's Public Authority for Civil Aviation announced it is 'temporarily suspending' flights by Boeing 737 Max aircraft at its airports.


State-owned Oman Air operates five Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft.


Malaysia


Authorities say all flights by Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft into and out of the country have been suspended.


The Civil Aviation Authority said no Malaysian carriers operate the Max 8, but that foreign airlines are banned from flying the plane in Malaysia, and from transiting in the country, until further notice.


UK


The Civil Aviation Authority said it had, as a precautionary measure, 'issued instructions to stop any commercial passenger flights from any operator arriving, departing or overflying UK air space'.


Five 737 Max aircraft are registered and operational in the UK, while a sixth was due to come into service later this week.


Norway


Norwegian Air Shuttle says it has grounded its Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft on a recommendation from European aviation authorities. The low-cost carrier has 18 of the planes.


Acting chief operating officer Tomas Hesthammer said: 'The safety and security of our customers and colleagues will never be compromised, and once authorities advise to cease operations we will of course comply.'


Germany


The transport ministry said the country is closing its air space to Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft.


The ministry confirmed to news agency dpa comments made by transport minister Andreas Scheuer to n-tv television.


The broadcaster quoted Mr Scheuer as saying safety is the priority, and 'until all doubts are cleared up, I have ordered that German air space be closed for the Boeing 737 Max with immediate effect'.


Ireland


Aviation authorities have suspended all variants of Boeing 737 Max aircraft into and out of Ireland's air space.


Officials said they made the decision 'based on ensuring the continued safety of passengers and flight crew'.


France


The French Civil Aviation Authority has closed French air space to all Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft.


Officials said France is 'carefully following the progress of the inquiry' relating to the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash in Addis Ababa.


It said French airlines do not have any Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft, but as a precautionary measure authorities have decided to 'forbid all commercial flights on a Boeing 737 Max departing from, travelling to, or flying across, France'.




'The safety and wellbeing of our customers and staff has remained our primary concern.' 


Flight ET302 was seen 'swerving and dipping' before crashing down minutes from take off from Addis Ababa on Sunday morning. Witnesses have described seeing it 'rotating twice in the air' before it hit the ground and exploded. 


It was the second disaster involving the US planemaker's latest model in less than five months after a Lion Air jet crashed in Indonesia in October, killing 189. US regulators have ordered Boeing to make urgent improvements to the aircraft model.   


The two disasters have alarmed the public with passengers taking to social media to voice their concerns and some demanding that the Max 8 be grounded globally while safety checks take place.


The scare has wiped billions of dollars off the market value of the world's biggest planemaker, as the Boeing Co share closed five per cent down on Monday having fallen by as much as 13.5 per cent at one point. 


Investigators have recovered the black box flight recorders from the Nairobi-bound Ethiopian Airlines plane, which was carrying passengers and crew from 35 countries, including some two dozen UN staff.


The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said Monday it was ordering Boeing to improve anti-stalling software and the model's maneuvering system, giving the company until the end of April to make the updates.


But the body ruled out grounding the fleet for now. It said investigations had 'just begun' and so far no data had been provided to 'draw any conclusions or take any actions.'


'If we identify an issue that affects safety, the FAA will take immediate and appropriate action,' it said in a statement.




A page of a flight crew operations manual is seen at the scene of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight plane crash today


A page of a flight crew operations manual is seen at the scene of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight plane crash today



A page of a flight crew operations manual is seen at the scene of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight plane crash today





Pictures have emerged showing the scale of the crash site from above.  Diggers have been excavating the site in a bid to locate bodies


Pictures have emerged showing the scale of the crash site from above.  Diggers have been excavating the site in a bid to locate bodies



Pictures have emerged showing the scale of the crash site from above.  Diggers have been excavating the site in a bid to locate bodies




The disaster was the second deadly incident involving the new model of Boeing passenger jet in less than five months, prompting concern over its safety


The disaster was the second deadly incident involving the new model of Boeing passenger jet in less than five months, prompting concern over its safety



The disaster was the second deadly incident involving the new model of Boeing passenger jet in less than five months, prompting concern over its safety





As many as 19 UN workers were feared to have been killed in the crash, the number being so high because of its environmental forum which started on Monday


As many as 19 UN workers were feared to have been killed in the crash, the number being so high because of its environmental forum which started on Monday



As many as 19 UN workers were feared to have been killed in the crash, the number being so high because of its environmental forum which started on Monday





Ethiopian Airlines chief executive Tewolde Gebremariam said the pilot had sent out a distress call and was given the all-clear to return to the airport


Ethiopian Airlines chief executive Tewolde Gebremariam said the pilot had sent out a distress call and was given the all-clear to return to the airport



Ethiopian Airlines chief executive Tewolde Gebremariam said the pilot had sent out a distress call and was given the all-clear to return to the airport


Last last night, Boeing Co confirmed it will deploy a software upgrade to the 737 MAX 8, a few hours after the FAA said it would mandate 'design changes' in the aircraft by April.


Boeing did not reference Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash in connection to the software upgrade. The statement did express the company's condolences to the relatives of the 157 people who died, however.


The company said in the aftermath of October's Lion Air Flight crash it has for several months 'been developing a flight control software enhancement for the 737 MAX, designed to make an already safe aircraft even safer.' 


The software upgrade 'will be deployed across the 737 MAX fleet in the coming weeks,' it said.


Meanwhile, Australia's civil aviation safety authority this morning suspended the MAX aircraft from flying to or from the country.


'This is a temporary suspension while we wait for more information to review the safety risks of continued operations of the Boeing 737 MAX to and from Australia,' Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority CEO Shane Carmody said in a statement.













US plane maker Boeing is facing questions over the safety of one of its key aircraft models after an Ethiopian Airlines jet crashed killing 157 - the second disaster involving a 737 MAX 8 in just five months. Pictured: The crash scene yesterday





Aftermath: Parts of the plane's landing gear lie in the soil at the crash site some 40 miles from Addis Ababa


Aftermath: Parts of the plane's landing gear lie in the soil at the crash site some 40 miles from Addis Ababa



Aftermath: Parts of the plane's landing gear lie in the soil at the crash site some 40 miles from Addis Ababa





The graphic shows how the plane's vertical speed fluctuated in the minute before it crashed near Addis Ababa airport


The graphic shows how the plane's vertical speed fluctuated in the minute before it crashed near Addis Ababa airport


The graphic shows how the plane's vertical speed fluctuated in the minute before it crashed near Addis Ababa airport 


Singapore regulators' have announced that all types of MAX aircraft were banned from its airspace. That came after China ordered domestic airlines to suspend commercial operations of the MAX 8, and Indonesia grounded its entire fleet of the jets for inspections.


Ethiopian Airlines has grounded its remaining MAX 8 jets, while airlines in South Africa, Brazil and Mexico have taken theirs out of service and pilots from Argentina's Aerolineas Argentinas are refusing to fly them.


The Malaysian government ordered an urgent review of orders for several MAX aircrafts by flag carrier Malaysia Airlines.


Several airlines have said they are not cancelling MAX 8 flights, however, while US carriers appear to retain confidence in the manufacturer.  



Newlywed husband received a text from wife while she was on board doomed Ethiopian jet... but she was dead before he was able to reply 





Indian newlywed Shikha Garg texted her husband from the doomed Ethiopian Airlines jet - but was dead before he could reply


Indian newlywed Shikha Garg texted her husband from the doomed Ethiopian Airlines jet - but was dead before he could reply



Indian newlywed Shikha Garg texted her husband from the doomed Ethiopian Airlines jet - but was dead before he could reply



An Indian newly-wed received a text from his wife while she was on board the doomed Ethiopian Airlines jet - but she was dead before he was able to reply, it has emerged. 


Shikha Garg, who was travelling to a UN meeting in Nairobi, had married Soumya Bhattacharya less than three months ago after dating him for three years.


Bhattacharya was also supposed to fly with her to Nairobi but a last-minute change in plans meant he stayed back in New Delhi, the Times of India reported.


'I have boarded the flight and will call you once I land,' Garg texted.


But before the husband could type a reply, his phone buzzed and a caller informed him about the plane crash, the newspaper said.


Bhattacharya had also bought a flight ticket for Nairobi but cancelled it because of an urgent meeting.


The couple, who lived in New Delhi, had instead planned a vacation after Garg's return from Nairobi, where she was due to attend the annual assembly of the UN Environment Programme.


On Monday Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said she was unable to get in touch with Garg's family and appealed for help on Twitter.


Later she said she had managed to speak to Garg's bereaved family members as well as those of other three Indians who died in the crash


Garg was a consultant with the Indian environment ministry and had taken part in the negotiations leading to the 2015 Paris climate accord.




The 'brand new' Boeing 737 MAX 8 took off from Bole International Airport and reached an altitude of 8,600ft before coming crashing down 37 miles from Addis Ababa


The 'brand new' Boeing 737 MAX 8 took off from Bole International Airport and reached an altitude of 8,600ft before coming crashing down 37 miles from Addis Ababa



The 'brand new' Boeing 737 MAX 8 took off from Bole International Airport and reached an altitude of 8,600ft before coming crashing down 37 miles from Addis Ababa



The Nairobi-bound Boeing 737 MAX 8 crashed just minutes after an early-morning takeoff Sunday from Addis Ababa.


People holding passports from 35 countries were on board including some two dozen UN staff.


The aircraft was the same type as the Indonesian Lion Air plane that crashed in October, killing 189 passengers and crew.


The latest crash has prompted airlines across the world to begin withdrawing the model from schedules.


Indian regulators Monday ordered additional maintenance checks on Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes but ruled out any immediate grounding of the fleet.


India's Spicejet and Jet Airways together operate 17 of the planes.


Jet, which has had to ground parts of its fleet in recent weeks due to its financial woes, said none of its Boeing 737 MAX aircraft was operational at present. 




Are 737 Max 8 jets safe? Boeing faces troubling questions after second crash in five months



Boeing issued a safety warning last November about its new 737 Max jets which could have a fault that causes them to nose-dive.


The special bulletin sent to operators was about a sensor problem flagged by Indonesian safety officials investigating the crash of a Lion Air 737 that killed 189 people just a week before the memo was sent.


Since the 737 Max was unveiled in 2017, 350 of the jets have been bought, with around a further future 4,761 orders placed. More than 40 airlines around the world use the 737 Max, which has four kinds in the fleet, numbered 7, 8, 9 and 10.


Airlines such as Norwegian Air, Air China, TUI, Air Canada, United Airlines, American Airlines, Turkish Airlines, Icelandair and FlyDubai use the aircraft with hundreds in operation around the world.


The 8 series, which was involved in the crash in Indonesia, has only been in commercial use since 2017.


Boeing said in November that local aviation officials believed pilots may have been given wrong information by the plane's automated systems before the fatal crash.


An AOA sensor provides data about the angle at which wind is passing over the wings and tells pilots how much lift a plane is getting.


According to a technical log the Lion Air plane, which had only been in service a few months, suffered instrument problems the day before because of an 'unreliable' airspeed reading.




The MAX models  are relatively new but has already been investigated after problems reported. Pictured: Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 (stock image)


The MAX models  are relatively new but has already been investigated after problems reported. Pictured: Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 (stock image)



The MAX models  are relatively new but has already been investigated after problems reported. Pictured: Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 (stock image)



Minutes after take-off the plane suddenly nose-dived hitting speeds of 600mph before slamming into the sea.


The warning issued today read: 'The Indonesian National Transportation Safety Committee has indicated that Lion Air flight 610 experienced erroneous input from one of its AOA (Angle of Attack) sensors.


'Boeing issued an Operations Manual Bulletin (OMB) directing operators to existing flight crew procedures to address circumstances where there is erroneous input from an AOA sensor.'


As a result of an investigation into the crash the jet manufacturer is said to be preparing a bulletin to be sent to operators of the 737 jets warning about faulty cockpit readings that could cause a dive.


The notice refers to the 'angle of attack', which is the angle of the wing relative to oncoming air stream, a measure that indicates if a plane is likely to stall.


This angle of attack, which is a calculation of the angle at which the wind is passing over the wings, is used to be determined if a stall is imminent.


Inspectors found faults on two other Boeing 737 MAX jets, including one which mirrored a problem reported on board the Lion Air plane.




Holidaymakers took to social media to voice their concerns. Lucy Barcoo asked TUI on Twitter: 'Can you please tell me which type of aircraft my flight home from Ibiza will be on please? Very concerned about the Boeing 737 Max.'


Michael Bibby wrote: 'TUI need to ground the death plane until Boeing provide a proper fix!'


In the US, passengers on an American Airlines flight from Miami were heard expressing their concerns to a flight attendant.


One, a 38-year-old woman named Kate, told the New York Post: 'All I heard the flight attendant say was, 'If you have a Toyota crash, do you take all the Toyotas off the road?'


'I fly a lot so I try not to think about what the potential outcomes could be.'


Others told the newspaper they would not have taken the trip had they known the aircraft was a Max 8 - the model involved in the Ethiopian Airlines disaster.  


Another passenger said: 'Good thing I didn't know about that. Had I known I'd probably still be where I was at.'


And a woman named as Carly M. added: 'It's really scary.'


Boeing has described the MAX series as its fastest-selling family of planes, with more than 5,000 orders placed to date from about 100 customers.


But not since the 1970s - when the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 had successive fatal incidents - has a new model been involved in two deadly accidents in such a short period.


The weekend crash sent Boeing shares nosediving as much as 12 percent on Monday.


The plane involved in Sunday's crash was less than four months old, with Ethiopian Airlines saying it was delivered on November 15.


It went down near the village of Tulu Fara, some 40 miles (60 kilometers) east of Addis Ababa.


One witness has told The Associated Press that smoke was coming from the plane's rear before it crashed in a rural field. 'The plane rotated two times in the air, and it had some smoke coming from the back then, it hit the ground and exploded,' Tamrat Abera said. 


Inhabitants of the remote area looked on from behind a security cordon as inspectors searched the crash site and excavated it with a mechanical digger.


The single-aisle Boeing jet had left a deep, black crater.


Ethiopian Airlines said the pilot was given clearance to turn around after indicating problems shortly before the plane disappeared from radar.


The airline's chief executive Tewolde GebreMariam said the plane had flown in from Johannesburg early Sunday, spent three hours in Addis and was 'dispatched with no remark,' meaning no problems were flagged.


The crash cast a pall over a gathering of the UN Environment Programme as it opened in Nairobi - at least 22 staff from several UN agencies were on board the doomed flight.


Delegates hugged and comforted one another as they arrived at the meeting with the UN flag flying at half-mast.


Other passengers included tourists and business travelers.


Kenya had the highest death toll among the nationalities on the flight with 32, according to Ethiopian Airlines. Canada was next with 18 victims.


There were also passengers from other countries including Ethiopia, Italy, the US, Britain and France.


Among those on board was Italian archaeologist Sebastiano Tusa, 66, his wife Valeria Patrizia Li Vigni was quoted as saying by the Corriere della Sera newspaper.


On Sunday, 'the friends I met at mass said I shouldn't worry because bad news travels fast,' she said.


'In the end it arrived anyway, and it destroyed my life. I felt the disaster coming... He hadn't even wanted to go.'

 


Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2019/03/12/boeing-jet-is-forced-to-turn-around-mid-air-after-britain-bans-737-max-planes/
Main photo article Boeing jets heading for Britain have turned around mid-air after the UK barred 737 Max planes from its airspace following the Ethiopia disaster, it has emerged.
British aviation chiefs made the decision after an Ethiopian Airlines aircraft crashed on Sunday killing all 157 on board – the...


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Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves US News HienaLouca





https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2019/03/12/16/10889172-0-image-a-9_1552407225931.jpg

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