Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Video - President Goodluck Jonathan visits Dana plane crash site in Lagos, Nigeria

 




Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan described on Monday the crash of a passenger aircraft as a "setback" for the country's aviation industry.

All 153 passengers aboard the plane were killed when it went down in a Lagos suburb on Sunday.


Al Jazeera


Related stories: President Goodluck Jonathan declares 3 day mourning for victims of Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


Video - All passengers dead in airline that crashed into building in Lagos, Nigeria 




Doomed Dana Airliner was forced to fly


An official of Dana Airline, yesterday, made a startling revelation on the circumstances surrounding Sunday's crash of the airline's Lagos-bound plane in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, saying the management of the airline knew the ill-fated aircraft was faulty before take-off but still went ahead to fly it.


This was corroborated by two officials of Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, (NAMA),one of the regulatory agencies in the Aviation sector who argued that the airline should be charged with murder because "the particular aircraft McDonnell 83 with Registration Number 5N-RAM had history of technical problems which both the airline and regulatory agencies were aware of"


According to the officials, "this particular aircraft had hydraulic problems three weeks ago and had to return to Lagos after take off, thereby aborting the flight.


DANA forced plane to fly - Staff alleges


The airline official, who made the revelation in an interview with Channels television,but does not want to be named, confirmed that the ill-fated Dana Air flight 0992, MC Donnell Douglas (MD 83) was faulty shortly after it left Lagos and stopped over in Calabar.


She alleged that the Indian owners of the airline threw caution to the wind and insisted that the plane must fly in a bid to maximise profit, thereby sending the plane over to Abuja to pick passengers, when it should have been returned to Lagos for further repair.


She also claimed the flight has had persistent history of faults with its hydraulics in recent times and it was not supposed to have flown.


According to the official, "the plane has been faulty for a very long time. There was a case when it was on ground in Uyo for over six hours, because of delayed flight, it had a bolt. And then in Abuja it happened a few days ago, then some people went with the aircraft but they could not come back, because it had a fault there and it couldn't leave Abuja."


"The same engineers that fixed it and then they sent crew to bring it with passengers to Lagos."


Confirming that the plane that crashed on Sunday, was not supposed to leave Lagos at all, the Dana official stated that "yesterday, it (Dana Air flight 0992) was not supposed to leave Lagos at all, but it left and then got to Calabar, developed fault and it was fixed and then they took it to Abuja, when they should have returned to Lagos but because they didn't want to part with the little money they will make, they took it to Abuja, loaded full passengers, and then it couldn't get to Lagos. "


"It has been having faults over time, continuously, hydraulics or one thing or the other. That aircraft kept having problems and they were not ready to park it" she alleged.


She added that the management of the airline does not return aircraft with faults back to the station, as it should have, but "they make it complete its normal route to where ever it is supposed to go before they bring it back to Lagos" she said.


Also, the Special Adviser, Technical to Minister of Aviation, Mr. Victor Oche Elias, has revealed that the pilot of the ill-fated plane, had alerted the aviation authority of the airport, on the emergency situation 11 nautical miles to landing.


It was further disclosed that the pilot's May-Day cry was given priority, but the plane could not make it, as it crashed 4 nautical miles to landing.


MC Donnell Douglas MD 83 was sold to Dana Airline in 2009 by a US-based Alaska Airlines, ahead of the airline commencing its services in Nigeria.


Dana Air blames crash on engine failure-Apologises


Meanwhile, Officials of Dana airline have attributed the cause of the ill fated flight which crashed at Alagbado on Sunday, to engine trouble Oscar Wason, Dana Air's director of operations, told CNN the American pilot of the passenger lane had reported engine trouble shortly before the crash. Sources said the engine of the Aircraft had caught fire and the radioed the control tower to declare an emergency, landing as it was in its final approach to Murtala Muhammed International Airport. The Dana Air flight was from Abuja to Lagos with its six crew members. The Boeing MD-83 slammed into a two-storey residential building. This contradicts earlier reports that the ill fated Dana aircraft crashed into high tension electricity tower. The Airline equally apologised to Nigerians and the families of the victims.


Reports said over at least 115 bodies have been recovered from the smoldering wreckage, where rescue workers were still searching for the flight data recorder. Policemen with cadaver dogs and officials of National Emergency Management Agency are maintaining the search for bodies and valuable items inside the wreckage. Large crane from a local construction company was being used to lift pieces of debris away. They also brought blow torches to cut through what remains of the plane. Some of the rescue workers wore masks to protect themselves from the stench from the site of the crash. Lagos state governor Babatunde Fashola told the surging crowd to make way for the first line responders to do their work because they are in an accident site, not a tourist site. Said Governor Fashola: "This is a crash site, it is an investigation site, and we should keep our distance and allow the first responders to do their work."


Meanwhile families of the deceased are being invited to take a look at some of the recovered bodies for possible identification. Said source: "It is going to be a tough call for some of the families to see the mangled bodies of their loved ones but in this part of the world it is important for departed ones to be given a proper burial"


Vanguard


Related stories: Video - All passengers dead in airline that crashed into building in Lagos, Nigeria


List of the deceased from Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria



Monday, June 4, 2012

Video - All passengers dead in airline that crashed into building in Lagos, Nigeria



Nigeria's president Goodluck Jonathan has declared three days of national mourning after an airliner crashed in the
commercial capital Lagos.

The Dana airlines flight was on its way from the capital Abuja. The cause of the crash is still unclear but the aircraft crashed down in a densely populated suburb north of the airport.

All 153 passengers and crew have reportedly been killed.


Al Jazeera


Related stories: List of the deceased from Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


President Goodluck Jonathan declares 3 day mourning for victims of Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


Passenger plane crashes into building in Lagos, Nigeria



List of the deceased from Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria

Onyeka Anyene


Harry Lawal


Mamuna Anyene


Berkisum Yindadi


Ebuka Enuma


Oluchi Onyeyiri


Sunday Enuma


George Moses


Ogechi Njoku


Noah Anyene


Kamsiyonna Anyene


Stamford Obrutse


Kaiyenotochi Anyene


Okeke Hope


Kayimarachi Anyene


Rev. Ayodeji Cole


Ngozi Cole


Noah Anyene


Ailende Ehi


Oluwasegun Funmi Abiodun


Shehu Saad Usman


Alade Martins


Onita Jennifer


Onita Josephine


Ike Ochonogor


Joy Alison


John Ahmadu


Aquade Roger


Osunbade Aderogu


Akowe Fatokun Anjola


Fatokun Olaoluwa


Fatokun Ibukun


Bukhari Maikudi


Amina Idris Bugaje


Ajani Adenike


Ike Abugu


Adijolola Abraham


Obot Emmanuel


Otegbeye Hadiza


Ehioghae Sonny


Onwuriri Celestine


Abikalio Otatoru


Norris Kim


Eyo Bassey


Njoku Charles


Anibaba Tosin


Okocha Christopher


Shobowale Femi


Phillip Chukwu -Ebuka


Sparagano Lawrence


Somolu Oluwakemi


Ariyibi Temitope


Mecha Eke


Ojugbana Amaka


Ojugbana Christopher


Hnuna Walter


Coker Olumide


Lilian Las


Mutihir Itsifanus


Yusuf Ali


Lt. Col. Jumbo Ochigbo


Eribake Wale


Zhai Shutao


Wang Yu


D. Awani


O. Awani


N. Chidiac


Rijoel Dhose


Li Huizha


Apochi Godwin


Kang Yi


Inusa Ahmed


Faysal Inusa


Mojekwu Adaobi


Ibrahim D


Bamaiyi Adamu


Ifekawa Jones


Peter Nosike


Anthony Nwaokoagbara


Mahmudu Aliyu


Nnadi John


Akwaeze Elizabeth


Dorothy Adedunni


Echeidu Ibe


Maria Okwulehie


Jennifer Ibe


Oloko Tunji


Sarah Mshelia


Ahmed Mbana


Okonji Patrick


Oyosoro Rajulie


Oyosoro Ugbabio


Kaikai Farida


David Kolawole Fortune


Eyinoluwa David Kolawole


Kaltum Abubakar


Dakawa Mahmud.


Patience Sunday Udoh


Asuquo Ini Obong


Onemonelease Aimanehi


Onyeagocha Chidinma


Onyeagocha Ogechi


Ike Okoye


Amaka Raphael


Ijeoma Onyijuke


Garba Abdu


Aisha Abdu


Benson Oluwayomi


Anthony Opara


Taiwo Lamidi


Awodogan Olusanmi


Obi Chinwe


Shaibu Memuna


Major I.G Muhammad


Nagidi Ibrahim


Attah Anthonia


Shaibu Sam


Ifeanyi Orakwe


Obinna Akubueze


Li Rui


Xie Zhenfeng


Okor Eseoghene


Chukwuemeka Okere


Adekunbi Adebiyi


Ibrahim Matankari


Wasa Ruth


Wasa Awiyetu


Ojukwu Alvana


Lawal Anakobe


Nabil Garba


Mohammed Falmata


Ibrahim Jangana


Okikiolu Olukayode


Komolafe Olugbenga


Dike Chinwe


Dike Chukwuezugo


Olusola Arokoyu


Adekola Ayoola


Akinola Olumodeji


Olukoya Banji Saka Otaru


Adeleke Oluwadamilare


Yusuf Ibrahim


Ikpoki Obiola


Aikhomu Ehime


Levi Ajuonuma


Mbong Eventus.


Leadership


Related stories: Video - All passengers dead in airline that crashed into building in Lagos, Nigeria


President Goodluck Jonathan declares 3 day mourning for victims of Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


Passenger plane crashes into building in Lagos, Nigeria



Sunday, June 3, 2012

President Goodluck Jonathan declares 3 day mourning for victims of Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


President Goodluck Jonathan on Sunday declared three days of national mourning for those who lost their lives in a Dana plane crash in Lagos, according to a statement from Aso Rock Presidential Villa.


The Dana Air flight from Abuja to Lagos crashed a few kilometres to the airport with 147 people on board, according to an airline official.


The statement said Jonathan had cancelled all his public engagements scheduled for tomorrow and had also directed that the Nigerian flag be flown at half-mast for the three days of national mourning.


The President has also ordered the “fullest possible investigation’’ into the crash.


The statement said that In compliance with the President’s directive, the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah, had already left Abuja for Lagos to oversee the crash investigations and present an interim report to the Federal Government as quickly as possible.


“The President joins all Nigerians in mourning all those who lost their lives in the plane crash which has sadly plunged the nation into further sorrow on a day when Nigerians were already in grief over the loss of many other innocent lives in the church bombing in Bauchi State.


“President Jonathan assures air travellers in the country that every possible effort will be made to ensure that the right lessons are learnt from the tragic loss of valuable lives in today’s plane crash and that further measures will be put in place to boost aviation safety in the country.


“He prays that God Almighty will grant the families of the victims of the plane crash the courage and fortitude to bear their irreparable loss,’’ said the statement signed by Dr Reuben Abati, Special Adviser to the President on Media & Publicity.


Meanwhile, a spokeman for the airline, Mr Tony Usidamen, said that 147 people were on board the plane, 139 of them passengers.


In another development, investigations into crash have begun, the Director-General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Dr Harold Demuren, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on phone on Sunday in Lagos.


Asked if they were survivors among the passengers on board when the plane crashed, he said: “We don’t believe there are survivors.


“I am talking to you from the scene of the crash. Right now our thoughts and prayers are with the families.”


Rescue efforts are being hampered by a huge crowd of onlookers, miscreants and sympathisers.


NAN correspondents at the crash site at Iju, on the outskirts of Lagos, report that the inaccessibility of the site has made it difficult for rescue teams, which include the police, Red Cross, Army, FRSC, Nigeria Air Force and Fire Service to get to the plane.


The General Manager, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, Dr Femi Osanyintolu, told NAN that the building on which the plane fell must be demolished for any rescue operation to take place.


He also said that they had to be cautious in demolishing the building because of its location in a residential area.


In a related development, a contract staff with the British American Tobacco Company, Mr Isaac Daniel, who resides in a two-storey building where the plane crashed, said he had lost everything to the incident.


Daniel said that he resided at the ground floor of the building with five members of his family.


He said that all his family members survived the crash but lost their certificates to the fire that engulfed the plane, adding that he was not at home when the incident occurred.


Eyewitnesses said that three lifeless bodies had been removed from the building.


Vanguard


Related story: President Goodluck Jonathan declares 3 day mourning for victims of Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria


Passenger plane crashes into building in Lagos, Nigeria


List of the deceased from Dana Air plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria