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Friday, April 16, 2010

UK flight restrictions continue through Saturday

A student tour group from Sunapee, N.H. wait in a British Airways line inside the international terminal at Logan International Airport in Boston Thur AP – A student tour group from Sunapee, N.H. wait in a British Airways line inside the international terminal …

LONDON – British civil aviation authorities say there will be no flights over England until Saturday morning at the earliest, as a huge ash cloud from Iceland's erupting volcano disrupts air traffic around the world.

The National Air Traffic Services says some flights could start leaving and arriving at airports in Scotland and Northern Ireland later Friday. Another agency update is expected at 1230GMT (8:30 a.m. EDT).

Flights around the world have been canceled and passengers stranded as the ash cloud affected operations at some of the world's busiest airports, including London's Heathrow.

The ash is spewing from a volcano beneath Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull (ay-yah-FYAH'-plah-yer-kuh-duhl) glacier that began erupting Wednesday for the second time in less than a month.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European air navigation agency says air traffic disruptions from the volcanic ash cloud will last at least another day.

Eurocontrol says the cloud's impact "will continue for at least the next 24 hours."

Source from : Newsyahoo!

Cargo aircraft crashes in northern Mexico; 5 dead

Posted 2010/04/14 at 1:31 pm EDT

MONTERREY, Mexico, Apr. 14, 2010 (Reuters) — A cargo aircraft crashed late on Tuesday near the airport in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey, killing five people, Mexican emergency authorities reported.

A federal policewoman guards the site where a AeroUnion Airbus A-300 cargo aircraft crashed near the Mariano Escobedo international airport in Monterrey April 14, 2010. REUTERS/Tomas Bravo

The Airbus A-300 aircraft, operated by privately held AeroUnion, crashed near a major road leading to the airport. Some debris from the wrecked jet landed on the grounds of the airport itself, Mexican media reported.

"At present we believe there may be five people dead, two from the crew and three on the ground, but nothing is confirmed yet," said an official at the state emergency authority who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak with the news media.

Partially burned wreckage from the aircraft was visible on the road leading into the airport in an area near several hotels, a Reuters witness reported.

The cause of the accident was not immediately clear.

(Reporting by Tomas Bravo in Monterrey and Armando Tovar and Robert Campell in Mexico City; editing by Todd Eastham)

Source from: NewsDaily

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Passenger plane skids off runway in Indonesia

April 13, 2010
The Merpati airline Boeing 737, which broke into pieces at Rendani domestic airport in Manokwari, West Papua.

The Merpati airline Boeing 737, which broke into pieces at Rendani domestic airport in Manokwari, West Papua.

A routine domestic flight almost ended in disaster on Tuesday when a jet carrying more than 100 passengers broke apart on landing in Indonesia, injuring about 20 people, officials said.

The Merpati airline Boeing 737 bounced off the tarmac at Rendani domestic airport in Manokwari, West Papua, hurtled into trees and skidded into a shallow river, director general of civil aviation Herry Bhakti Singayuda said.

"All the passengers were in a total panic, some even screamed and cried," said passenger Zainal Hayat, 52, who crawled out of a crack in the fuselage and was being treated at hospital with facial injuries.


"We flew safely and the plane touched down smoothly on the runway but it just didn't stop. It skidded very fast and I felt it hit something twice before it stopped and tumbled down."

"I got out through a crack in the plane near my seat."

Singayuda said the plane came to a halt with its tail section in the river about 200 metres from the end of the landing strip.

"All 103 passengers and six crew members are safe. Some are injured. They have been rushed to hospital," he said.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed that no Australians were no board the flight.

Heavy rain and fog were suspected of playing a part in the crash, he added, although expert investigators had yet to arrive at the scene.

Manokwari Hospital emergency unit nurse Benget Hutagalung said "about 20" people had been brought in with shattered limbs and head injuries.

Witnesses said the left wing broke off as the plane smashed into the trees at the end of the runway. The cockpit was also almost completely separated from the rest of the fusilage.

The plane was flying a routine domestic route from Sorong, also in West Papua province, to Manokwari, a distance of about 340 kilometres.

Transport ministry experts from the capital Jakarta were on their way to the rugged province in the far east of the country to investigate the crash, an official said.

The vast archipelago of Indonesia relies heavily on air transport but has one of Asia's worst air safety records.

Merpati airline corporate secretary Sukandi suggested that rain played a part in the crash and ruled out pilot error.

"It was raining when the plane landed. The pilots followed all the safety procedures regarding landing in wet conditions," he said.

Indonesian airlines have been attempting to recover from a poor safety record in recent years.

In August last year a Merpati aircraft disappeared in remote Papua. Its wreckage was found two days later and all 16 passengers and crew aboard were killed.

Three years ago 21 people, including five Australians, were killed when a Garuda plane crashed on the runway at Yogyakarta airport.

Last year 102 people were killed in two separate crashes involving Indonesian military aircraft.

Shortly after the Garuda crash, the European Union banned all Indonesia-registered aircraft from flying to Europe. The EU lifted the ban on Garuda in December last year, citing improvements in the airline's safety standards.

AFP, Staff Reporters

Source from : Theage.com



Cathay Pacific Emergency Landing Injures 8

Posted on: April 14th, 2010 by Lisa Davidson

On Tuesday, a Cathay Pacific Airways flight had to make an emergency landing in Hong Kong when the plane was experiencing engine problems. The situation turned to one of the airline’s most serious incidents in the last few years, as 8 passengers were injured.

There haven’t been many details released from the Civil Aviation Department in Hong Kong or from Cathay Pacific officials as to what caused the incident. In a statement from the carrier, they said that it was the engine on the left of the plane that shut down while it was approaching its landing.

All that Tony Tyler, the airline’s chief executive, said was that the A330-300 was carrying 13 crew and 309 passengers when it encountered an engine issue while approaching the airport on a flight from Surabaya in Indonesia. He said that it was too early to speculate what caused the problem. He also reassured everyone that they will do whatever they need to make sure their fleet is the safest in the air.

Upon landing at the airport, a small fire started on the aircraft’s main landing gear. However, fire services quickly extinguished it. It is likely that the fire was caused by the tyres overheating when the pilots had to use the emergency braking system, according to the Civil Aviation Department.

The emergency slides were deployed for passengers to evacuate on the runway. 8 passengers were sent to the hospital for injuries to the head, arms and legs that were probably caused while evacuating, according to authorities.


Source from :News.carrental

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Polish president, top officials killed in plane crash

President had been due to attend Katyn memorial

By Lidia Kelly, ReutersApril 10, 2010 9:35 AM

SMOLENSK, Russia, April 10 (Reuters) - Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski, its central bank head and the country’s military chief were among 97 people killed when their plane crashed in thick fog on its approach to a Russian airport on Saturday.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk described the crash as "the most tragic event of the country’s post-war history."

Ashen-faced and wearing a black suit and tie, Tusk told a news conference he would fly to the crash site.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin talked to Tusk by telephone and has also gone to the scene of the crash, a spokesman said.

The death of Kaczynski, who with his twin brother was a dominant force in Polish politics, brings political uncertainty. A presidential election had been due in October but now must be held within two months, according to the constitution.

The president’s wife and several other high-ranking government officials also were aboard the aged Tupolev Tu-154, which plunged into a forest about two km (1.3 miles) from the airport in the western Russian city of Smolensk.

Pilot error was a possible reason for the crash, said Andrei Yevseyenkov, spokesman for the Smolensk local government. Local officials said the plane had clipped treetops on its way down.

Thousands of mourners gathered outside the presidential palace, laying flowers, lighting candles and saying prayers. Church services in the predominantly Catholic country were hastily arranged.

Kaczynski, 60, was a one-time ally of Solidarity hero Lech Walesa and a co-founder of the rightist Law and Justice party with his brother. He resigned from the party when he became president in 2005 but continued to support it.

A party official told Reuters the president’s twin, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, had left for Smolensk.

Kaczynski’s death, along with that of many senior members of Law and Justice who also were on board, at a stroke changes the Polish political scene by wiping out much of the opposition.

"The political consequences will be long term and possibly will change the entire future landscape of Polish politics," said Jacek Wasilewski, professor at the Higher School of Social Psychology in Warsaw.

While the president’s role is largely symbolic, the holder can veto government legislation. Lech Kaczynski infuriated Tusk’s government several times by blocking legislation including health sector reform.

The speaker of the lower house of parliament, Bronislaw Komorowski, has been named acting president, as the constitution stipulates. Komorowski is also Tusk’s presidential candidate in the centrist Civic Platform party.

SMOULDERING FUSELAGE

Russian television showed the smouldering fuselage and fragments of the plane scattered in a forest. A Reuters reporter saw a broken wing some distance from the rest of the aircraft.

The plane was one of two Tu-154s in the government fleet, both about 20 years old. Government officials had complained about the age of Poland’s official fleet.

Russia’s Emergencies Ministry said 97 people were aboard, including 88 members of a Polish delegation en route to commemorate Poles killed in mass murders in the town of Katyn under orders from Soviet leader Josef Stalin in 1940.

Smolensk regional governor Sergei Antufyev said there were no survivors of the crash. The Emergencies Ministry said the bodies of the victims would be transported to Moscow for investigation.

A Russian mission control official who was present during conversations with the pilot said the pilot had ignored advice.

"The pilot was advised to fly to Moscow or Minsk because of heavy fog, but he still decided to land. No one should have been landing in that fog," he told Reuters, on condition his name was not published.

A Russian military official was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying air traffic control instructed the pilot several times to divert to another airport.

Polish Justice Minister Krzysztof Kwiatkowski planned an inquiry into the crash. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Russian investigators would cooperate with the Polish side.

CENTRAL BANK CONTINUITY

Among the other casualties of the crash were Kaczynski’s wife Maria, along with Slawomir Skrzypek, 47, who had been central bank governor since 2007, the chief of Poland’s military Franciszek Gagor and Deputy Foreign Minister Andrzej Kremer.

Analysts said Polish markets would not be severely jolted. "Although tragic, we do not believe that this event threatens political and financial stability in Poland in any fundamental way," Goldman Sachs said in a research note.

Some relatives of victims of the Katyn massacres also were on board, said a Polish government official in Smolensk.

Thousands of Polish prisoners of war and intellectuals were murdered at Katyn by Soviet forces in spring 1940 in an enduring symbol for Poles of their suffering under Soviet rule.

The government declared a week of national mourning.

"I’m all broken up ... it cannot be expressed in words," said Ewa Robaczewska from outside the palace.


Sunday, April 4, 2010

MAS cadet pilot intake


Malaysian Airline System Berhad

Cadet Pilot
Posted on: 3rd Apr 2010
See all jobs of this company



About Company
Flying to over 100 destinations across 6 continents, MALAYSIA AIRLINES believes in the ultimate excellence. We are looking for dynamic and highly motivated individuals to contribute to the growth of our airline.

Job Description

· Malaysian citizen, age between 18 to 26 years old (as at date of application)

· Pass SPM or its equivalent qualification recognized by Malaysian Government with six (6) credits including Bahasa Malaysia and a minimum of B4 in Mathematics, Physics and English taken in one sitting.

Or

· Possess Diploma / Degree in Engineering or Science related disciplines with minimum CGPA 3.0 or above and six (6) credits with pass in Bahasa Malaysia in SPM taken in one sitting.

· Good command of Bahasa Malaysia and English both written and spoken

· Must be physically and mentally fit with good eyesight (visual acuity of at least 6/60 without optical aid, correctable to 6/6) and not colour blind.

· Minimum height 163 cm (5ft 4in).

- Successful candidates will be required to sign a bond with MAS -

Additional Information




Job Category: Hospitality/Tourism/ Airline

Job Location: Selangor

Key Skills: Bahasa Malaysia and English language, meet SPM requirements

Role: Pilot







source from: TheStarOnline