Ethiopia crash: Nine Britons among 157 killed as airlines ground Boeing planes
Written by News on 12/03/2019
At least nine Britons are among 157 killed in a plane crash in Ethiopia – with airlines around the world grounding the aircraft involved.
It was initially thought that seven British nationals had been on board Flight ET302, which crashed minutes after take-off from Addis Ababa with no survivors.
Questions are now being raised about the Boeing 737 Max 8 involved in the air disaster. It is the same model as the Lion Air plane which crashed into the sea off Indonesia last year, killing all 189 on board.
Ethiopia Airlines, whose new jetliner crashed shortly after take-off in clear weather on Sunday, says it has decided to ground its remaining four Boeing 737 Max 8s until further notice as “an extra safety precaution”.
Authorities in China, South Africa and Indonesia and Mexican airline Aeromexico have followed suit – but several airlines serving UK airports, including TUI and Norwegian, are continuing to fly the planes.
Both the flight data and cockpit voice recorders have now been recovered. Meanwhile, witnesses have described seeing smoke billowing out of the rear of the plane and a loud noise before it hit the ground.
Officials have contacted the families of all those killed in Sunday’s tragedy with the victims coming from 35 nations.
British UN worker Joanna Toole, a 36-year-old from Devon, has been identified as one of those who died.
Colleagues at the UN fisheries and aquaculture department described Ms Toole as a “wonderful human being”, while her father said she was a “very soft and loving” woman.
One Irish victim was named as Michael Ryan, a married father of two based in Rome with the UN’s World Food Programme, which distributes rations to people in need.
Also among the dead was polar tourism expert Sarah Auffret, who was making her way to Nairobi to discuss tackling plastic pollution in the world’s seas.
As many as 19 UN workers were feared to have been killed in the crash.
Manuel Barange, a UN director, said he was “profoundly sad and lost for words” over her death, saying she had been travelling to Nairobi to represent the organisation at the UN Environment Assembly.
Also on board was Joseph Waithaka, a 55-year-old who lived in Hull for a decade before moving back to his native Kenya, his son told the Hull Daily Mail.
Briton Sam Pegram – an aid worker from Preston – was also on board the jet.
Prime Minister Theresa May said she was “deeply saddened” by the disaster, and offered her condolences to everyone “affected by this tragic incident”.
Doctors and a prominent football official are also believed to be among the dead.
Many of the passengers were from Kenya, but others were said to be from Italy, France, the US, Canada, Ethiopia, Egypt, Germany, Slovakia, India and China.
On Sunday, visibility was clear but air traffic monitor Flightradar24 said “vertical speed was unstable after take-off”.
The pilot had sent out a distress call and was given the all clear to return, according to the airline’s chief executive Tewolde GebreMariam.
Senior captain Yared Getachew had a “commendable performance” having completed more than 8,000 hours in the air, the airline said.
The plane had flown from Johannesburg to the Ethiopian capital earlier on Sunday morning, and had undergone a “rigorous” testing on 4 February, a statement continued.
(c) Sky News 2019: Ethiopia crash: Nine Britons among 157 killed as airlines ground Boeing planes