PDA

View Full Version : Plane prangs in Sinai


4HolerPoler
6th May 2007, 08:36
I didn't even know there was a "multinational peace observer force" there, let alone that they had aircraft. Sad news.

An aeroplane belonging to the multinational peace observer force in Egypt's Sinai peninsula crashed in Sinai on Sunday and at least three people were killed, security sources said. The sources said preliminary information indicated the plane had crashed on a road in Sinai. Further details were not immediately available. The Multinational Force and Observers mission was set up to supervise security provisions in the 1979 peace treaty between Egypt and Israel.

4HP

Very_Low_and_Fast
6th May 2007, 10:53
From Yahoo News:

"Capt. Ihab Moheildin, the air control officer at Cairo airport, said the Canadian-made DeHavilland DHC-6 Twin Otter plane took off in sunny, clear weather at 7:46 a.m. local time from El Gorah base — the northern headquarters of the peacekeeping mission — on its way to St. Catherine's airport in the southern Sinai Peninsula.

He said the airport lost contact with the plane at 9:15 a.m. after receiving a distress signal, indicating a possible mechanical failure. The plane then crashed into a mountain, according to Moheildin."

Flying Spag Monster
6th May 2007, 15:14
Several years ago The French operated Transalls (sp?) and Twotters and the Cannucks operated a rotary wing outfit, 212s I think, based at El Gorah, an old Israeli fighter base. The US army has (had?) rotary wing outside of Sharm, don't know if they are still there or some other countries are flying them now.

4HolerPoler
7th May 2007, 00:44
Sadder news - it was worse than initially reported -

Nine members of a multinational peacekeeping force, eight French nationals and a Canadian, were killed on Sunday when their plane crashed during an emergency landing in Egypt's Sinai peninsula. According to Egyptian security sources on the crash site, the light aircraft suffered a technical failure and tried to perform an emergency landing on a road near the town of Nakhl, a remote area in the central Sinai mountains. All the dead belonged to a quarter-century-old peacekeeping mission, the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO), which suffered its greatest loss with the accident. "The nine military personnel on board, eight French and one Canadian, all died in this tragic accident," the French defence ministry said, confirming an earlier Egyptian toll.

One of the plane's wings smashed into a truck carrying large containers, sending the aircraft crashing into a hill, the sources said, quoting the truck driver, who survived the accident. "Yes, unfortunately we have had reports of a plane crash. It was a French aircraft carrying eight French crew members. There was one other officer on board whose identity we are still trying to get," the MFO director general's representative, Normand St. Pierre, said. "It was a training mission and we lost touch with the plane shortly after takeoff," he said. The plane was heading south from the northern Sinai airport of Al-Gurah, where the MFO has one of its two bases in the peninsula. "The two pilots radioed in to report a technical failure and warn that they would attempt an emergency landing, after which we lost contact with them," a source at Al-Gurah airport said.

Witnesses in the area said that the plane smashed into a truck as it was attempting its emergency landing before crashing into the side of a mountain. Egyptian aviation official Ehab Mohieddin told AFP that a preliminary enquiry indicated that "the accident may have been due to pilot error because he did not respect the minimum altitude set by international rules." :eek: A French military team was expected in Egypt on Sunday to open its own enquiry. "The aircraft is a twin-engine transport plane which carries out liaison missions and constitutes France's contribution to the force," a French military source in Cairo said. French President Jacques Chirac, who is set to be replaced following the outcome of a presidential election being held on Sunday, voiced his "great sadness" at the accident. The MFO is an independent peacekeeping force not related to the United Nations, created as a result of the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty and funded mainly by the two neighbours and the United States. The approximately 2,000-strong force was set up in 1982 and includes troops from 11 countries, including a large US contingent. It is based in two camps in the Sinai peninsula. According to the MFO's website, the aircraft is a DHC-6 Twin Otter which provides transport between the force's two camps.