Friday, 1 February 2013

This is serious: Plane flies unguarded after one pilot slept off leaving his co-pilot locked out of the cockpit

by Rachel Ogbu
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Investigations are underway after claims that a pilot fell asleep while in sole charge of a passenger plane on the Boeing 737 flight to Crete.
He had a co-pilot who had left to use the toilet but couldn’t get in from the flight deck immediately. After a struggle, he entered back into the cockpit, only to discover his colleague sleeping.
Although it occurred in September, Dutch airline Transavia recently launched a probe into what happened and the incidence was only made public yesterday by the Dutch safety board (OVV) in a report published on its website calling it a ‘serious’ incident.
The report read:
‘After two and a half hours in the air the captain of the Dutch-registered plane left the cockpit to go to the toilet,’ the OVV said.
‘A little later he wanted to return to the cockpit. When he used the intercom to call the first officer to open the door he got no reaction.
‘When he managed to get into the cockpit, he found the first officer asleep.’
The Mail Online UK reports that in September pilots’ groups raised concerns that new flying hours imposed by the EU could lead to precisely this problem.
Under the new rules, pilots could be landing commercial jets after 22 hours awake – including 11 hours flying, plus stand-by time and travel to the airport.
MPs had warned in their original report that 22 hours of wakefulness was ‘an extraordinary figure’ – particularly for night flying – that raised levels of fatigue equivalent to being ‘drunk.’
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin was accused of ‘rolling over to Brussels’ after his department approved the rules despite the concerns raised in a report by the respected Commons’ Transport Select committee.
UK pilots can currently go up to 18 hours without sleep – but more than four out of ten pilots already report nodding off in-flight – of whom a third awoke to find their co-pilot also asleep.
The new rules are expected to be adopted into EU law after mid-2013 and fully implemented by the end of 2015.
 YNaija.com

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