1971 Merpati Nusantara Airlines Vickers Viscount crash explained

1971 Merpati Nusantara Airlines Vickers Viscount crash
Occurrence Type:Accident
Image Upright:1.15
Site:Off Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia
Aircraft Type:Vickers Viscount 828
Aircraft Name:Sabang
Operator:Merpati Nusantara Airlines
Tail Number:PK-MVS
Origin:Kemayoran Airport, Jakarta, Indonesia
Destination:Tabing Airport, Padang, Indonesia
Occupants:69
Passengers:62
Crew:7
Fatalities:69
Survivors:0

On 10 November 1971, a Merpati Nusantara Airlines Vickers Viscount, registration PK-MVS, crashed in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia, after telling air traffic controllers they could not make their destination due to bad weather. All 69 people aboard the aircraft were killed in the crash.It remains the third worst Vickers Viscount accident.

Accident

The aircraft was flying between Kemayoran Airport in Jakarta, and Tabing Airport, the then airport of Padang. Five minutes before it was scheduled to arrive at Tabing, air traffic controllers lost radio contact with the flight. Controllers at Talang Betutu Airport, Palembang, South Sumatra, reported the aircraft issued a distress signal. The flight crew reportedly said they could not land at Padang because of poor weather and bad visibility.[1] The aircraft subsequently crashed into the Indian Ocean,[2] killing all 62 passengers and seven crew aboard the aircraft.[3]

Passengers and crew

All the passengers aboard the aircraft were Indonesian nationals, except for a West German doctor and his wife, and a British helicopter pilot who was employed in Indonesia. Eight children were also aboard the flight. Among the victims was the Indonesian renowned choreographer of Minangkabau descent Huriah Adam.

NationalityFatalitiesTotal
PassengersCrew
Indonesia59766
West Germany202
Great Britain101
Total62769

Aftermath

Three days after the accident pieces of the wreckage were found floating 75 miles off Sumatra, Indonesia. Fisherman found seats of the aircraft between the Beringin and Katang-Katang islands. An Indonesian Navy boat also recovered clothes and uninflated life rafts.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Associated Press. Associated Press. Airliner Lost With 69 Aboard. 1 January 2011. The Press-Courier. 11 November 1971.
  2. News: Turbo-prop feared lost, 69 on board . 1 January 2011. The Windsor Star. 11 November 1971.
  3. Web site: Accident description. Aviation Safety Network. 1 January 2011.
  4. News: Plane Wreckage Found in Ocean. Newspaper Archive. 1 January 2011. 13 November 1971.