Panico per coccodrillo a bordo, aereo cade e muoiono 20 persone


su flight global c'era un articolo su un f16 olandese caduto in afghanistan.la conclusione dell'inchiesta diceva che non "è esclusa che la perdita di controllo del velivolo sia stata causata dalla presenza a bordo di un ragno o di un serpente"...
 
Congo, un coccodrillo a bordo provocò la caduta di un aereo

KINSHASA (CONGO) - Fu un coccodrillo a provocare la caduta del volo della compagnia Filair che il 25 agosto scorso dalla provincia di Bandundu, nella Repubblica democratica del Congo, viaggiava verso Kinshasa. L'indagine su quanto accadde, riporta il Daily Telegraph, ha ora verificato che un alligatore, nascosto in una grossa borsa sportiva da un uomo che aveva intenzione di venderlo illegalmente, ne sbucò fuori e seminò il panico prima tra i passeggeri e poi in cabina. Tra i venti a bordo solo due sopravvissero allo schianto: il testimone che ha permesso di ricostruire la dinamica dell'incidente e lo stesso coccodrillo, che poi venne abbattuto con un colpo di machete.
www.repubblica.it

E questo è l'articolo del Daily Telegraph:

Aircraft crashes after crocodile on board escapes and sparks panic

A small airliner crashed into a house, killing a British pilot and 19 others after a crocodile smuggled into the aircraft in a sports bag escaped and started a panic.

Published: 5:53PM BST 21 Oct 2010

One of the passengers had hidden the animal, which he planned to sell, in a big sports bag


The plane came down despite no apparent mechanical problems during an internal flight in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

It has now emerged that the crash was caused by the concealed reptile escaping and causing a stampede in the cabin, throwing the aircraft off-balance.

The crocodile survived the crash, only to be dispatched with a blow from a machete.

Danny Philemotte, the Belgian pilot and 62-year-old owner of the plane's operator, Filair, struggled in vain with the controls, with Chris Wilson, his 39-year-old First Officer from Shurdington, near Cheltenham, Glocs.

The plane was on a routine flight from the capital, Kinshasa, to the regional airport at Bandundu when the incident unfolded, on August 25.

It crashed into a house just a few hundred feet from its destination. The occupants of the property were outside at the time.

According to the inquiry report and the testimony of the only survivor, the crash happened because of a panic sparked by the escape of a crocodile hidden in a sports bag.

One of the passengers had hidden the animal, which he planned to sell, in a big sports bag, from which the reptile escaped as the plane began its descent into Bandundu.

A report of the incident said: "The terrified air hostess hurried towards the cockpit, followed by the passengers."

The plane was then sent off-balance "despite the desperate efforts of the pilot", said the report.

The plane was a Czech-made Let L-410 Turbolet, one of more than 1,100 produced as short-range transport aircraft and used mainly for passenger services.