Kata Air Transport Flight 007

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Kata Air Transport Flight 007
Croatian AN-32B Ruzyne.jpg
An Antonov AN-32, like the one involved in the crash
Accident
Date11 April 2008 22:15 UTC
SummaryEngine failure
SiteChișinău International Airport approach
46°55′38″N 28°53′12″E / 46.92722°N 28.88667°E / 46.92722; 28.88667Coordinates: 46°55′38″N 28°53′12″E / 46.92722°N 28.88667°E / 46.92722; 28.88667
Aircraft
Aircraft typeAntonov An-32
Aircraft nameCline
OperatorKata Air Transport
RegistrationST-AZL
Flight originVienna
2nd stopoverChișinău International Airport
KIV/LUKK
3rd stopoverTurkey
DestinationKhartoum, Sudan
Crew8
Fatalities8
Survivors0

Kata Air Transport Flight 007, killed eight crew when a departing Sudanese cargo flight to Turkey turned back and crashed short of the runway.

Early reports indicated that the Ukraine-built An-32 "Cline" had engine problems and turned back to Chișinău International Airport, Moldova.[1][needs update] The flight from Vienna had refuelled and was bound for Khartoum, Sudan via Antalya, Turkey with a Moldovan crew of eight.[2][3]

The aircraft had undergone maintenance at Chișinău. It crashed at 22:15 local time, or 20:15 UTC. Moldovan authorities requested Russian assistance with the black box records. Novosti reported that the crew was four Russians and four Moldovans,[4] but it was later determined that there were four Ukrainian and four Moldovan citizens.[5]

The aircraft was later announced as belonging to of Sudan and as having crashed close to the village of Băcioi, Moldova carrying 2.3 tonnes of fuel.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ "Eight die in plane crash in Moldova", 11 April 2008, Russia Today Archived 18 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Popeski, Ron (12 April 2008). "Cargo plane crashes after takeoff from Moldova", Reuters[dead link]
  3. ^ "Sudanese plane crashes in Moldova, eight dead", 12 April 2008, Earth Times Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Moldova asks Russia to help investigate air crash that killed 8", 12 April 2008, Novosti
  5. ^ "Russian experts to Chisinau to help investigate An-32 crash". 13 April 2008[dead link]
  6. ^ AP report, 12 April 2008.[dead link]

External links[]

  • "The accident". Civil Aviation Administration of the Republic of Moldova. 12 April 2008. Archived from the original on 26 June 2009.
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