Asia Sentinel has a good review of some of the issues surrounding the years of China Airlines screw-ups:
What is it about China Airlines? It is Taiwan’s largest airline and flag carrier, owned by the China Aviation Development Foundation, which belongs to the government of the Republic of China. And it has a spectacular record of disaster over the last 37 years. Its “full loss equivalent” rating, or the sum of the proportion of passengers killed for each fatal event, at 6.23 is the highest of any other East Asian airline.
Its record for FLEs, as they are called by airsafe.com, a consumer awareness group, is worse than that for Garuda Indonesia, the whipping boy of airline analysts across the world. Such patrician carriers as Singapore Airlines International and Cathay Pacific have records below 1.0. Qantas has a record of zero. According to another measure, since 1970, China Air has averaged 4.16 fatal events per million flights against a worldwide average under 1.
The article supplies a list of the many fatal accidents of China Air:
August 1970: China Airlines YS11 is on final approach in bad weather into Taipei when the plane hits a ridge 800 meters from the runway. Two of the five crew members and 12 of the 26 passengers die.
November 1971; China Airlines Caravelle is believed to have been destroyed by a bomb over the Formosa Strait. All 17 passengers and eight crew members are killed.
February 1980; China Airlines 707-300 is on final approach into Manila Airport in a “steep and unstablized approach,” lands hard short of the runway, rips off two engines and parts of a wing. Two of 122 passengers were killed.
February 1986; China Airlines 737-200 touches down but aborts landing in the Pescadores Islands, Taiwan. All six passengers and seven crew members are killed in the attempt to go around.
October 1989: China Airlines 737-200 hits cloud-shrouded high ground at 2130 meters in “incorrect takeoff procedure” near Hualien, Taiwan. All seven crew members and 49 passengers are killed.
April 1994; China Airlines A300-600 stalls and crashes due to crew errors during approach to Nagoya, Japan. All 15 crew and 249 of the 264 passengers are killed.
February 1998; China Airlines A300-600 crashes into a residential area near Taipei short of the runway during a second landing attempt in bad weather. All 15 crew and 182 passengers plus seven persons on the ground are killed.
August 1999; China Airlines MD11 drags a wing and crashes at Chek Lap Kok in Hong Kong during an attempt to land in a typhoon. The aircraft comes to rest upside down and on fire. Three of the 300 passengers are killed.
May 2002. China Airlines 747-200 breaks up in flight near the Penghu Islands, Taiwan about 20 minutes into a flight from Taipei to Hong Kong while the aircraft was just above 30,000 feet. No distress signal or other communication was received prior to the crash that killed all 19 crew members and 206 passengers.
There have been lesser incidents. In 1985, a Boeing 747 went out of control, recovered, and managed an emergency landing at San Francisco International Airport. In 1993, another China Air 747 touched down more than two thirds of the way down the runway at Hong Kong’s old Kai Tak Airport and ended up in the water. All 396 aboard lived to tell about it. In 2002, a China Air flight took off from a taxiway in Alaska, nicked an embankment on the way out and damaged its landing gear, although it was able to land safely.
Why? Well....bad policy:
Several factors contributed to the problems. Heavy maintenance for several years was contracted to a shadowy firm on the island of Tainan that had formerly belonged to the US Central Intelligence Agency. Also, the airline’s pilots were largely drawn from the ranks of the republic’s air force, and they tended to fly like air force pilots, taking chances they needn’t take.
China Air has been working hard to correct its faults, analysts say. The airline brought in expatriate pilots several years ago as captains to alleviate what had become known as an “ex air-force flying club.” The first few years, the analyst said, were trying. “I talked to one (expatriate) pilot who said ‘you have to remember at all times that the guy in the right-hand seat is trying to kill you.”
It also sent young pilots off to other countries, particularly Australia, “to learn the proper way of flying,” he says, although they were frustrated when they came back because seniority kept them in the co-pilot’s seat.
On the "island of Tainan?" Some minor errors here, but in the main, a good overview.
[Taiwan]
Ehem, quite a bit of those expat pilots are from Latin America, and yes, their stories would make your hair stand on end. But actually, even they claim CAL has improved a lot.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, Michael, do you have any idea to what are they referring to in that last article about the bomb incident in 1971?
Somehow China Airlines can't get out of trouble. It's a pity. I believe they try hard and I always felt safe when flying with CA. Bur now they should once again ckeck their safety procedures and pilots' training. After that maybe they should finally rename themselves to "Taiwan Airlines" to symbolize the new (safety) era. But first they need to earn the reputation to do so. Taiwan stands for high technology and is one of the most developed countries on earth. Why can't they simply manage to operate airplanes properly? I'm curious to hear the reason for the latest desaster...
ReplyDeleteafter all the trouble with Chinese pet food, toothpaste, clothes with lead chemicals on them, and other recalls of Chinese products, it makes perfect sense that China Airlines also makes headlines for shodding gas line from engine to engine, so all the world can know that China Airlines, obviously owned by China (why else call it China Airlines then?) is a shoddy carrier and like all other products in China, execept Gong Li, liable to explode at any time....
ReplyDeleteGreat evacuation of all the passengers though, the crew and flight attendants deserve a huge pat on the back for saving everyone's lives......that is a story unto itself.....those girls really earned their stripes that morning....
all that said, flying is a risk. anytime you or anyone else goes up in a metal airplane, stapled together with nuts and bolts, there is a chance of 1. the plane falling out the sky 2. crashlanding 3. crash taking off or 4. fire on board...
in this case, the 165 people aboard this China Airlines (sic) plane when the lottery of life, and they have lived another day to tell their tale. But it happens every day in many countries and in many skies.....flying is a crapshoot and tomorrow, or the next day, there will be another plane crash in UK or USA or France or Italy or Afrcia or India. Men were not meant to fly. Planes are an abomination. Those magnificent men and their flying machines, this was no God's will. Planes should all be stopped flying right now before anyone else loses their live. Take a ship to Okinawa. Take a train across country. All plane travel should be stopped now. This China Airlines near miss fire on the ground was just a warming. But will anyone listen or pay heed? Not on this Earth. Not in this life.
From here in Hong Kong, the entire fiasco got good play in the media, but the China Daily (not sic) called China Airlines a company based in Taiwan Province. Politics again. Gotta love the Kong Kong media....