Some 29 TransAsia pilots suspended after safety tests

Airline’s pilots had undergone proficiency tests following last week’s fatal Taiwan crash

TransAsia  ATR-72 passenger aircrafts parked at Taipei’s Songshan Airport. 29 of the airline’s pilots have been suspended following proficiency tests instituted after last week’s fatal crash. Photograph: David Chang/EPA
TransAsia ATR-72 passenger aircrafts parked at Taipei’s Songshan Airport. 29 of the airline’s pilots have been suspended following proficiency tests instituted after last week’s fatal crash. Photograph: David Chang/EPA

The Taiwan government ordered all airlines to review their safety protocols after nearly half of the pilots trained to fly TransAsia's ATR twin-engined aircraft were suspended following last week's fatal crash in the capital.

Taiwan’s aviation regulator said 10 of TransAsia’s 49 ATR pilots had failed oral proficiency tests on handling the aircraft during engine failure. A further 19 pilots did not take the test, due to sickness or because they were not in Taiwan, the civil aviation authority (CAA) said.

The 29 pilots who failed or did not take the test have been suspended, the CAA said.

"The result is not acceptable for us," TransAsia chief executive Peter Chen told a news conference. "We will definitely strengthen their training."

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Authorities ordered the tests after one of the airline’s ATR 72-600s crashed into a river in Taipei, killing at least 42 of the 58 on board.

TransAsia Flight GE235 clipped an overpass with one of its wings and crashed upside down into shallow water shortly after taking off from a downtown Taipei airport last Wednesday.

Initial data indicates that the plane lost power in one engine after take-off from Taipei’s Songshan airport. The power was then cut in the other engine.

Officials in Taiwan and industry analysts have said evidence presented so far raises questions over whether the pilots may have accidentally cut the wrong engine.

“We’ll ask every local airline to check their flight safety,” Chen Jian-Yu, the transportation and communications minister, told reporters after the TransAsia test results were made public.

Standards questioned

This was the second TransAsia ATR crash in seven months, and the fifth crash involving the airline since 1995, raising questions about safety standards at Taiwan’s third largest carrier.

The pilot and co-pilot of the plane were among those killed.

A TransAsia pilot said the tests were conducted by a CAA official and a pilot from rival carrier Uni Air.

“Those who failed will be suspended for one month. They will be given another month for preparation. If they fail again, they will be fired,” the pilot told reporters.

TransAsia has cancelled at least 142 flights since the crash.

Reuters