YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

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YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by robbreid »

N87V King Air

No sign of plane

Two Americans, one Canadian on board

Aerial searches yesterday failed to yield any sign of the US-registered plane that disappeared on Saturday, with two Americans and a Canadian onboard who were conducting geophysical surveys for a Canadian mining company in the Cuyuni area.
The company’s permanent base camp at Aricheng Airstrip.

The company’s permanent base camp at Aricheng Airstrip.

The aircraft, a Beech King Air, last made contact with the Control Tower at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Timehri at 3:06pm on Saturday to report that they were commencing normal operations over the survey area. On board were pilot, Captain James Wesley Barker, 28, and First Officer Chris Paris, 23, both US citizens and Canadian Patrick Murphy, a Geophysics technician.

Intermittent bad weather yesterday hampered the search for several hours. Guyana Defence Force (GDF) Air-Corp and Special Forces are leading the search operation with two British helicopters also involved along with five other planes.

The Beech King Air, N87V, was chartered from Dynamic Aviation Inc. by Terraquest Ltd to conduct geophysical surveys on behalf of Prometheus Resources (Guyana) Inc. The survey area is in the west sector of Guyana in the vicinity of Chi Chi, Region Seven (Cuyuni/Mazaruni).

A release from the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) last night said that the aircraft departed Timehri at 2:14pm Saturday and last reported over the survey area commencing normal operations at 3:06pm. No further reports were received from the aircraft.

The GCAA said that search protocols were activated and the Rescue Coordination Centre became operational. “Air Traffic Control alerted other aircraft in the vicinity to try to establish contact with the Beechcraft but this was unsuccessful”, the release said. The US MCC Southern Command was also contacted for any reports of emergency distress signals emanating from the area but none was received.

The aviation authority said that due to the terrain and weather in the area it was not possible to commence a night search so arrangements were put in place to commence the search and operation early yesterday. The search operation is being coordinated by the Air Navigation Services of the GCAA with the GDF Air Corps and Special Forces conducting the actual search using their aircraft along with two British helicopters currently involved in training with the GDF.”These aircraft are supported by two aircraft chartered by GCAA from Air Services Limited and two private aircraft operated by Mr. Bernard Singh and GAMAS respectively”, the statement said adding that another aircraft currently engaged in similar geophysical survey and operated by Mc Par Geophysics is also assisting in the search operation.

Imbaimadai in Region Seven has been established as the field base for the operation with fuel and equipment flown there. The GCAA said that the aircraft were in the area conducting a systematic search of the survey area but no positive information was received. Due to low cloud coverage, the agency said, the aircraft were forced to land at Imbaimadai and remained on the ground for a while with operations recommencing at 3 pm yesterday, following which some of the aircraft returned to Timehri and Ogle.

However, the two British helicopters remained there checking with villagers for any information pertaining to the missing plane while “some aircraft will remain in the general area overnight and will recommence operations in the morning”, according to the GCAA.

Earlier yesterday, Director of Civil Aviation, Zulficar Mohamed had told Stabroek News that the GDF-led search party had not spotted the plane and due to the bad weather during parts of yesterday the search party had to wait some hours. Mohamed said that members of the party went into villages with the aim of garnering information.

A press release from the police on Saturday evening had said that the twin-engine aircraft, which is white in colour with red stripes, had departed Timehri to conduct a survey in the Cuyuni area just after 2pm on Saturday and was expected to return at around 6:15 the said day, but failed to do so.
Uranium

Prometheus Resources (Guyana) Inc is a subsidiary of the Toronto-based U308 Corporation, whose Vice-President, Nancy Chan-Palmateer confirmed to this newspaper that they had contracted Terraquest Ltd to do a geophysical survey in Guyana. While she confirmed that three persons were on board the aircraft she was unable to give any further details.

According to Terraquest Ltd’s website the company specializes in airborne geophysical surveys, geophysical consulting, data interpretation, enhancement and modeling.

Meanwhile, U308 Corporation is described on its website as a Canadian junior mineral exploration company based in Toronto, Canada. The company said that it is currently focused on uranium exploration in Guyana with its primary business objective being to acquire and explore, with the intent of developing, mineral resource properties.

It said that, to date, its subsidiary, Prometheus Resources (Guyana) Inc, has been granted two Reconnaissance Permits, the CM Permit (Permit A) and the PMCR Permit (Permit B), by the Guyana Geological and Mines Commission (GGMC) to conduct geological and geophysical surveys on adjacent lands covering an area of approximately 1.33 million hectares in Western Guyana.

“The CM Permit (Permit A) provides Prometheus Resources Guyana Inc. with the right to occupy the CM Area for three years commencing November 28th, 2005 in order to conduct geological and geophysical surveys for radioactive minerals and rare earth elements, which include uranium,” the company said on its website.

It said that Permit A grants the company the right to apply for, and be granted by the GGMC, “up to 15 prospecting licenses (each consisting of areas of approximately 202 hectares to approximately 4,856 hectares) for radioactive minerals and rare earth elements, provided that it has satisfied the requirements of the Permit and the GGMC.”

And as for Permit B it gives the company the right to “occupy the PMCR Area for three years commencing May 31, 2006 in order to conduct geological and geophysical surveys for radioactive minerals and rare earth elements, which include uranium.”

This permit gives the company “the right to apply for, and be granted by the GGMC, up to 20 prospecting licences (each consisting of areas of approximately 4,856 hectares) for radioactive minerals and rare earth elements, provided that it has satisfied the requirements of the Permit and the GGMC.”

Many aviation incidents, including the April 25 crash near Kopinang in Region Eight last year have raised the issue of Guyana not having proper search and rescue facilities.

Photos @ YKZ August 28/08, departed August 30th after spending much of the summer at YKZ.

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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by square »

OK I get there was bad weather. But did someone at least circle around IFR to try to pick up the ELT signal? All I heard were a bunch of "oh noo low cloud" VFR cancellations about the search effort, meanwhile there are probably a hundred medevac king airs on call in the province just itching to do any flying at all..
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by Chuck Ellsworth »

Guyana is a province?
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by robbreid »

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuyuni-Mazaruni

Cuyuni-Mazaruni is a region in Guyana, South America.

http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N87V ... /MDST/TTPP
N87V departs heads south on Sept. 20/08.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by chipmunk »

Anyone heard anything new about this one?
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by robbreid »

Dynamic Aviation

Terraquest

Aircraft still missing . . .

A Bathurst, N.B., man was one of three people who was on board a plane that went missing in Guyana on the weekend.

Patrick Murphy was conducting geophysical surveys for a Canadian uranium exploration company.

The plane had been flying over rough terrain above Guyana when it went missing Saturday afternoon.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Futility persists in search for plane
BY Staff (Nov 13/08 Local News

It was another fruitless day yesterday for those out in the jungle searching for the missing Dynamic Aviation-owned Beech King Air which has been missing for more than a week.

Zulfikar Mohamed, the director of the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA), yesterday said that the teams went out and searched but there was no luck. He said one of the Dynamic Aviation owned aircraft, which has been doing aerial searches, was expected to go back to the area last evening but because of bad weather was unable to fly. The ground team continued its efforts yesterday and will be back out today.

On Sunday, a weak Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT) signal was picked up but there has not been any further detection since.

When the aircraft went missing, Captain James Wesley Barker, First Officer Chris Paris (both US citizens) and Canadian Patrick Murphy were its occupants. The trio was at that time conducting a geophysics surve

An extensive search is underway, according to Nancy Chan-Palmateer, a spokesperson for the exploration company U308 Corp.

"At this point, we continue to have no communication or any contact from the plane or the three crew members on board so we're trying to narrow down the location where the plane was last sighted," Chan-Palmateer said.

" We don't have any details about what may have happened. It is an anxious time and we are sending our prayers to both the crew and the families at this very, very difficult time."

Murphy works for a Markham, Ont.-based company called Terraquest.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by sky's the limit »

I hope these folks are sitting on a strip somewhere....

I used to fly for these people, and it was only a matter of time. You guys here in Canada think there are issues, you have no idea - I didn't.

Truly hope this works out for the best.


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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by chipmunk »

Really crappy that they didn't appear to have sat tracking... I also read somewhere that their ELT was U/S or not on board, but not sure as to the truth of that.

Regardless, I really hope these guys are ok...
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by yycflyguy »

sky's the limit wrote:I hope these folks are sitting on a strip somewhere....

I used to fly for these people, and it was only a matter of time. You guys here in Canada think there are issues, you have no idea - I didn't.

Truly hope this works out for the best.


stl
My thoughts exactly STL. Having had the "honour" to fly more than 3000 hours for this company and having personally flown this plane on survey missions, I have a pretty good idea how this can happen. It most certainly is not the first loss of aircraft to them as about 3 years ago they lost a plane, the Captain was killed and the FO badly burned doing a medfly mission in Tampa while a Tropical storm was approaching.
http://www.sptimes.com/2006/06/29/Hills ... amed.shtml
http://www.sptimes.com/2006/06/12/Tampa ... o_Da.shtml

Those geosurveys are conducted at low altitude (probably 500') over rugged, unfamilar terrain. I truly hope that the pilots and tech are found uninjured but I doubt it will play out like that. In my 4+ years with them I always thought how lucky they were not to have had worse accidents then the gear collapse in MMTG. It shows the quality of the guys they had doing the work with minimal to no training nor supervision. I guess the odds are catching up to them.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by sky's the limit »

yycflyguy wrote:. In my 4+ years with them I always thought how lucky they were not to have had worse accidents then the gear collapse in MMTG. It shows the quality of the guys they had doing the work with minimal to no training nor supervision. I guess the odds are catching up to them.

YYC,

You managed to nicely expand on my initial thoughts, and your training/supervision comment is the meat of the issue. From pilots to Mtnc, there are some serious flaws, ones that like you, I am amazed haven't caused more serious issues. Pushing weather, pushing mtnc, pushing people, and pushing a/c capabilities are just part of the business model, and of course having little regulatory oversight in foreign countries only exasperates the problem.

I remember you were flying "Near Death" last time I saw you in Mexico... lol What a ship she was...!

Anyway, we can only hope this has a positive outcome.

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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by robbreid »

FAA Registry

FAA Accident Report N7043G Florida accident mentioned above. (Click on Full Narrative for full report).
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by sky's the limit »

during cruise flight, both propeller secondary low pitch stop (SLPS) lights illuminated... The right propeller feathered at some point during the flight
Same thing happened to me over Belize cruising along fat, dumb, and happy at FL250... Big noise, right engine into feather, feet off the co-pilots seat and fully awake for the first time in hours.... The SLPS unit fried and had to be replaced - was told by the Mtnc Mgr in the US that I "didn't need it to fly...." And I should just return those 1050nm to Jamaica without it... Er, right.

Typical Dynamic response to anything that would affect dispatch reliability rates...

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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by yycflyguy »

Yeah, but you were one of those "overly cautious" pilots that didn't want to fly through hurricanes with a bunch of bloody maggots! The pupae must get through!!!
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by sky's the limit »

yycflyguy wrote:Yeah, but you were one of those "overly cautious" pilots that didn't want to fly through hurricanes with a bunch of bloody maggots! The pupae must get through!!!

Haha. Yes, indeed.

I'm cool with tree top to tree top, but Hurricanes give me the Willies...! Lol


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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by Panama Jack »

As I sit here typing my response, I look up at a frame picture on my wall ahead of me of another King Air 90 in a similar scheme (minus the long tail boom) that I flew for the same company on similar missions almost decade ago.

A sad story from South America, and hopefully one that will end with the finding of not uninjured crew. However, not surprising. I can identify and attest to the stories of yycflyguy and sky's the limit. Have my own series of "there I was" stories from this company, not only from the pilot seat but also from the perspective of a guy who tried to organize and run a safety program for them. The MPTO-MMTG runs stretched the BE90 to it's limits, how they managed to do MMTG to MKJP legally is beyond me. After a 0% non-stop record over 2 flights (one flight resulting in a tech-stop in the Caymans, another in Mo-bay) I was removed from that run, and that made me all the more comfortable. All the more amazing is that they tried to maintain a dispatch reliability that scheduled airlines can only dream of . . . and that is without any type of support structure!

Yup, a company running a fleet of "clunkers" on Government-contract with poor regulatory oversight. Combine that with the luxury of being able to run under a cover of diplomatic protection and often with staff from the same bible college, who blinded with the faith that they were doing God's work, convinced that "God would provide" where the Company did not, because they were working for a Christian, family-owned company.

Recently read this on-line story of a ferry flight. It took me back to those days. :rolleyes:

http://www.utility-aircraft.com/ferry_f ... a%2001.htm
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by sky's the limit »

Ah Jack.... I hear you.

MMTG - MKJP in a 90.... "Stretching" the limits isn't doing it justice! You remember the VFR Fuel waiver??? They just seemed to discard ALL the requirements for it's issue, you know, like weather? Lol

When I took over as "manager," and I use the term loosely, my new Mtnc. guy was fresh from Bible Camp with NO wrenching experience beyond his ticket.... Poor bugger lost 30lbs in three months trying to keep those machines running. "Help is on the way" we were told - EVERY WEEK... Never came of course. As long as that dispatch reliability didn't slip below 98%, it was all good, right?

Or how about flying unpressurized hulls at FL250 SPIFR with NO pressure masks? That was my big fight, I heard rumour they acquiesced to that once I left... My Wife used to kick my ass in Cribbage for days after return fights... I was certainly slower than usual! ;-)

As long as the computer had no Red Flags on it, and the cost/hr was below budget, they seemed to think all was well. The aircraft I inherrited in MKJP were is such a sorry state, that we refused to fly two of them off the Island... The books had been cooked by the previous Mgt/Mtc guy for a long time, just signing things out, but neglecting to do them. Missionary attitude strikes again...

Anyway, thanks for the memories guys! Hope both of you are now truly fat, dumb, and happy in the big iron.

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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by Cat Driver »

This missionary mindset in flying reminds me of one in Manitoba years ago when I was flying water bombers.

We were just killing time at the airport waiting for a fire or stand down so we could go to the bar when a Cessna 185 taxied in and parked next to our airplane.This guy gets out of it and proceeds to unload the biggest load we had ever seen come out of a Cessna 185 he had stuff packed way back behind where the baggage compartment bulkhead should have been...it was fu.kin unbelievable.

It was clearly a missionary airplane because it not only had the mission name on it it had " God is my Co-Pilot " written acoross the nose.

My F.O. finally went over and asked the guy if his Co-Pilot had loaded his airplane for him......the missionary got real defensive about that question.

Typical mindset for those who live on faith alone.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by flyinthebug »

Yes Cat organized religion (faith) is for the weak.
I also have watched Mission Air in YWG load a PA31 with more s*it then ive seen go into a pair of -6`s and all in the name of god. pffft.

Anymore news on this aircraft?

I flew these missions as well and flying 500' AGL all day doesnt bode well in the hopes that we may find them sitting it out somewhere. My thoughts are with the crew & pass.
Fly safe all.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by KAG »

Does anyone know if Patrick did any work for fugro on the SHOALS contract a few years back or did any work for Obtec?
I hope everything turns out ok...
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by PS-90A »

I hope everything turns out OK. I have seen them all the time in KZ, seen them do maitenance in the hangar. They also flown some of our work for Optech...

http://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=46171
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by 040hurts »

I read these posts, and am amazed. I currently work survey and from what im reading its not just my company that is streached so thin that is breaking every rule set in place to prevent accidents. perhaps this is a survey wide problem, any thoughts?
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by chipmunk »

040hurts wrote:I read these posts, and am amazed. I currently work survey and from what im reading its not just my company that is streached so thin that is breaking every rule set in place to prevent accidents. perhaps this is a survey wide problem, any thoughts?
No, it's not a survey-wide problem.
Some companies are putting MORE measures in place to increase safety.

At my workplace:
-All aircraft equipped with 406 ELTs for at least 1.5 years now
-All aircraft have sat tracking and sat phone, position reports sent by the system every 1 minute and monitored by a flight follower
-AME and tons of spares on site with each aircraft; if any other part is required it is shipped ASAP
-never ANY pressure to fly if weather is not appropriate; our CP and DFO routinely back us up and shield us from any management pressures
-on some jobs over the jungle where SAR facilities are limited to Day only, for example, crew returns to airport with 4-5 hours of daylight remaining
-jobs only accepted with appropriate drapes/terrain that does not out-climb the aircraft's performance, with shallower drapes given to our the twin piston machines (no single pistons in the fleet.)
-no surveys flown single engine over water beyond gliding distance
-adherence to IAGSA procedures

... I could go on and on.

I know there are some really crappy survey outfits out there, but I there are some good ones too...

And please remember - no job is worth risking your life.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by Ballsssssss »

I work for the same company as Chipmunk and second what she said. I have also worked for another, much smaller, survey company that I would also consider a safe company.
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by chipmunk »

http://www.stabroeknews.com/news/search ... ing-plane/
Search called off for missing plane
BY Staff

- occupants presumed dead
With no sighting after two weeks, Transport and Hydraulics Robeson Benn yesterday called off a search and rescue mission for a missing US charter plane, saying its three passengers are presumed dead.

Benn, who said it was a difficult decision to make, told a press conference that it was futile to continue the search after 15 days with no sign of the three men who were aboard the Beach King Aircraft. Americans James Wesley Barker, 28, and Chris Paris, 23, the Captain and First Officer, respectively, along with Canadian Patrick Murphy, a geophysics technician were on board the plane. The aircraft was chartered from Dynamic Aviation Inc by Terraquest Ltd to conduct geophysical surveys on behalf of Prometheus Resources (Guyana) Inc, a subsidiary of the Toronto-based U3O8 Corporation. The aircraft was scheduled to operate in the Chi Chi – Imbaimadai area located in Cuyuni and following four hours, thirty minutes in the area it was expected to return to the Cheddi Jagan International Airport.

“As difficult as it may seem we have done everything that we could do or that we can possible do… We have expended all the resources, the time and the effort that we could at this stage of the game [and]…until anything else happens we have concluded that the aircraft and its occupants are lost,” Benn said. “We are calling off the search… We presume that the aircraft and its occupants, that there has been a crash and both the aircraft and its occupants are presumed lost.” According to him, the men “perished” and the authorities are not in the position to recover them. “We have no specific knowledge of their whereabouts,” he said.
However, Benn said the companies plan to continue limited search operations in the area where the aircraft went missing, using residents and persons who know the area.

Faced with criticism that the search and rescue operation may have been put into motion much too late after the last contact with the aircraft on November 1, Benn said that there was no way aircraft could have flown into the area the same day because of the bad weather and the terrain. The minister described the operation as the “most intensive and sophisticated search for any aircraft missing in Guyana.”

Head of the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) Zulfikar Mohammed also told the media that immediately after contact was lost with the aircraft, personnel from the authority, the Guyana Defence Force (GDF), British military, Terraquest and local aircraft operators begun planning for the search and rescue mission. “The two British Lynx helicopters, a fixed wing aircraft and GDF Special forces were put on standby; however due to the lack of the ELT [Emergency Locator Transmitter] signal being received, terrain, a poor weather report in that area and other logistics it was considered unsafe to a launch a search on the night of the 1st of November,” Mohammed said.

On the first day of the search, eight aircraft were used, with six the following day but after nine days of intense aerial search using specialised equipment nothing positive was found. The search continued with more emphasis on ground searches in specified areas and limited aerial search by a Dynamic Aviation King Air to gather areas of interest for forensic analysis.

Mohammed said it was after some 200 hours and 28,260 miles of aerial searching with no sighting of the plane, it was decided that the search will continue using ground patrols only. He said in addition to the search conducted by the aerial and ground parties the police and the Special Forces were also checking on any reports made by residents in the area.

Benn said that during the search imaging techniques were used with the support of the company which owns the aircraft. There is a complete acquisition of photograph record in the area and that record is being analysed locally and in the United States for information for future operations. While saying it is distressing that they have been unable to locate the aircraft or its occupants, Benn sought to assure the public, the organisations concerned and the families of the missing men, “that we have, both the Civil Aviation Authority [CAA] and the government of Guyana, that we have done everything that we could under the circumstances and that our thoughts and hopes and best wishes are with them.”

Fending off the criticism, Benn said the search procedures Guyana signed onto with the International Civil Aviation Organisation were followed. He pointed out that the aircraft was equipped with a special satellite tracking system, which is subscribed to by the company that owns it and it sends of a signal every half an hour. He said the aircraft flew at 150 miles an hour, or two miles a minute, so in the period it was not heard from it could have flown quite a few miles.

He said while they had planes on standby to fly out in the area on the day it lost contact, because of the weather it would have been “unconscionable at that time, our knowing the terrain in which they had to fly, the time of the day [to allow them to fly.]” The minister pointed out that sunset is now at 5:30 pm and on escarpment in the area the actual sunset below there will be much earlier. “For those persons in the GDF air wing and for those other persons in the British military who themselves or otherwise were prepared to sacrifice themselves… it would have been the wrong thing in any event to have attempted that in the absence of any fixed [location] to go out to investigate.”

He stressed the mission faced tremendous difficulty without a firm location and no access to the area because of the weather. He said there were times when the helicopters were flying over the area and could not see the ground because of the weather. By 9:15 the following the morning, the search aircraft were flying over the area. By the same evening two aircraft that were coming out of the location were asked to make radio contacts as they flew over the general area where the aircraft would have gone missing.

However, Benn said “everything we can do can be done better, particularly in hindsight,” but he stressed again that international procedures were followed. “The fact of the matter is Guyana’s terrain in that area is what it is and we can’t change it…. It is possible that the plane could have crashed against the escarpment and tumbled amongst the large boulders and tress at the bottom and covered…” he said.

Meanwhile, Benn revealed that a draft search and rescue policy document is in the pipeline and it involves not only aircraft search and rescue but maritime search and rescue with the intention or forming an organisation or body which coordinates such operations. He said that the CAA authority and the Maritime Administration are in the process of perusing the document.

But he added that in respect to aircraft search and rescue he does not see how it could have been done other than the way it was done during the search for the missing aircraft. The minister said while any “useful criticism” will be welcomed, “I don’t think it would help anybody for people to go off and say they are setting up their own search and rescue thing, particularly at the aviation level. Obviously it would have to be brought into the particular normal framework and that framework which normally works.”
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Panama Jack
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Re: YKZ regular King Air visitor missing in Guyana . . .

Post by Panama Jack »

Very sad. Condolences to the family and friends of the crew.

Doing an SAR in that type of jungle really is like looking for a needle in a haystack. I remember when in Panama a Twin Otter went missing, they finally found it after 15 days, but after figuring that it had been hijacked and flown to Colombia by one of the passengers who had recently been released form prison.

A few months earlier, a US fighter aircraft had been found not too far from the Panama Canal . . . that had been missing since WWII.
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