Fatal China Plane Crash Intentional Claim US Officials

Published May 18th, 2022 - 08:19 GMT
US Officials, Media Claim China Plane Crash Was Intentional
This file photo taken on March 27, 2022 shows rescuers standing in a silent tribute for victims at the site of the China Eastern Airlines flight MU5375 plane crash in Tengxian county, Wuzhou city, in China's southern Guangxi region. China's preliminary investigation into the country's deadliest plane crash in over 30 years did not identify a cause, according to a report released on April 20, 2022. (Photo by CNS / AFP)

The fatal crash of a China Eastern Airlines plane that killed a reported 132 people in March this year was “intentional,” according to media reports citing U.S. officials.

“Flight data indicates someone in the cockpit intentionally crashed a China Eastern jet,” The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday night, quoting U.S. officials.

A Boeing 737-800 plane of China Eastern Airlines with 123 passengers and nine crew members crashed in a mountainous area in Guangxi on March 21.

“The information gathered so far in the China Eastern probe has led U.S. officials involved with the investigation to turn their attention to the actions of a pilot, people familiar with the matter said. There is also a possibility that someone else on the plane could have broken into the cockpit and deliberately caused the crash,” the report claimed.

Beijing is yet to respond to the claims.

However, Chinese state-run Global Times quoted the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) saying it "did not release any investigation information about the cause of the crashed China Eastern MU5735."

The NTSB said it has assisted Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) with the probe into the crash and "all information related to that investigation will be released by the Chinese aviation regulator."

The flight was heading from the southeastern city of Kunming to Guangzhou, a port city near Hong Kong.

All the passengers and crew on board were declared dead several days later after the crash and were identified through DNA testing.

“The plane did what it was told to do by someone in the cockpit,” the report claimed quoting the American official’s preliminary assessment.

The assessment was made after an “analysis of information extracted from the plane’s damaged flight-data recorder,” it added.

ABC News also claimed the same, again quoting unnamed U.S. officials: “The China Eastern Airlines plane crash that killed 132 people is believed to have been caused by an intentional act.”

“Chinese authorities, who are leading the investigation, so far haven’t flagged any mechanical or flight-control problems with the plane,” the official told The Wall Street Journal.

After an intense search, the rescue teams found the plane’s two black boxes, one of them was “badly damaged.”

Search teams found some 36,000 pieces of wreckage at the site.

Chinese authorities had said the weather was not hazardous at the time of the accident and the flight had normal communication with air traffic control until its sudden fall.

The plane itself was in proper flying state and the pilots too were in good health, an official of China Eastern Airlines earlier had said.

 

Subscribe

Sign up to our newsletter for exclusive updates and enhanced content