This is very sad indeed
and one must exercise adequate care and apply caution when walking or working
around any equipment or machinery especially the big ones with larger
propellers and enormous horsepower.
This lady that died by
being sucked into the engine of the plane is one of scenarios that can be
avoided.
Even as we plan on
boarding flights to our separate destinations whether local or international,
we should endeavor to adhere to instructions of the ground staffs at the
airport
An engineer at Mumbai
airport died after being sucked into the engine of an Air India plane, the
company said.
The deadly incident
happened late Wednesday as the Airbus A319 was being towed backward from the
parking bay in preparation for taxiing out, said Anil Mehta, an Air India
official.
The engineer, Ravi
Subramanian, was standing near the landing gear under the plane's nose as he
supervised the process, Mehta told CNN.
Passengers had boarded
the aircraft for a flight to the city of Hyderabad. It wasn't clear if any of
them saw what happened.
Air India officials
declined to give any further details, saying the country's civil aviation
regulator is investigating the engineer's death.
Airline insists it follows safety procedures
"We are deeply
saddened and regret the tragic incident at Mumbai airport yesterday
evening," Air India Chairman Ashwani Lohani said in a statement, offering
his condolences to Subramanian's family.
The Times of India
newspaper cited airline sources as saying that Air India staff had
followed an irregular engine start-up procedure because the plane's auxiliary
power unit wasn't working.
"Air India follows
all standard safety procedures and parameters," Mehta said in response to
the report.
The incident is believed
to be the first of its kind involving an aviation worker in India.
The only remotely
similar case was 20 years ago, according to the Times of India, when a man used
a borrowed airport pass to ride his moped across the runway in Hyderabad and
was sucked into an aircraft engine.
CNN's Harmeet Shah Singh
reported from New Delhi, and Jethro Mullen wrote from Hong Kong.

No comments:
Post a Comment