Pilot error caused deadly Bangladesh jet crash: govt

Pilot error caused deadly Bangladesh jet crash: govt
Pilot error was to blame when a fighter jet smashed into a Bangladesh school in July, killing 36 people in the country's worst aviation crash in decades, the government said on Wednesday. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 33 sec ago

Pilot error caused deadly Bangladesh jet crash: govt

Pilot error caused deadly Bangladesh jet crash: govt
  • “There was an error in his take-off,” Yunus’s press secretary Shafiqul Alam told reporters.
  • More than 170 people were injured in the crash, many badly burned

DHAKA: Pilot error was to blame when a fighter jet smashed into a Bangladesh school in July, killing 36 people in the country’s worst aviation crash in decades, the government said on Wednesday.
Pupils had just been let out of class when the Chinese-made F-7 BJI aircraft slammed into the private Milestone School and College in Dhaka on July 21.
The government announced the findings of a committee report into the crash after it was submitted to the interim leader, Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus.
“There was an error in his take-off,” Yunus’s press secretary Shafiqul Alam told reporters.
More than 170 people were injured in the crash, many badly burned.
The military had initially said that the 27-year-old pilot was on a routine training mission when the jet “reportedly encountered a mechanical failure.”
He tried to divert the aircraft away from densely populated areas but crashed into the two-story school building.
The crash sparked anger and demands that the air force shift its training programs from the densely populated capital.
The air force had initially rejected those demands, saying a base in the capital was important for strategic reasons.
However, Alam said the report recommended that the air force “conduct its training outside Dhaka.”
It also advised that the Civil Aviation Authority ensure “infrastructure such as hospitals, schools, warehouses, and small industries are not built near airports.”


Russia says its forces are clearing out Ukrainian troops as they push through Pokrovsk

Updated 2 sec ago

Russia says its forces are clearing out Ukrainian troops as they push through Pokrovsk

Russia says its forces are clearing out Ukrainian troops as they push through Pokrovsk
Ukraine has acknowledged its troops face a difficult position in the strategic eastern city
Capturing Pokrovsk would give Moscow a platform to drive north toward the two biggest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in Donetsk — Kramatorsk and Sloviansk

MOSCOW: Russia said on Wednesday that its forces were advancing north inside the Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk and clearing out Kyiv’s troops in a drive to take full control of what has been an important transport and logistics hub for the Ukrainian army.
Ukraine has acknowledged its troops face a difficult position in the strategic eastern city, which Russia has been trying to capture for more than a year, but denies they are surrounded and says reinforcements are on their way.
Russia sees the city as the gateway to its capture of the remaining 10 percent, or 5,000 square km (1,930 square miles) of Ukraine’s eastern industrial Donbas region, one of its key aims in the almost four-year-old war.
“Assault groups of the 2nd and 51st armies continued to destroy surrounded Ukrainian Armed Forces units in the residential area of the Prigorodny microdistrict, in the eastern part of the Central District and in the private sector (where there are residential houses),” the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement.
“The offensive in the northern direction continues,” it added, saying its forces were also clearing Ukrainian troops from settlements on Pokrovsk’s southeastern flank and had repelled numerous Ukrainian attempts to break out of encirclement.
The Ukrainian military said on Tuesday that fierce fighting was under way in a part of Pokrovsk that was key for Kyiv’s frontline logistics and that additional special forces had arrived there, with more weapons and equipment being sent.
There was no immediate comment from Ukraine on the situation in Pokrovsk on Wednesday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Monday the area around Pokrovsk remained under severe pressure but up to 300 Russian servicemen still in the city had made no gains in the past day and there were just 60 in another city, Kupiansk.
The Russian Defense Ministry said either he had no grasp of what was happening on the ground or he was deliberately trying to conceal the parlous situation for Kyiv’s forces.
Ukrainian units were trapped in “cauldrons” in both locations, it said, and their position was deteriorating rapidly while Russian forces advanced, “leaving no chance for Ukrainian servicemen to save themselves other than by voluntary surrender.”
Reuters was unable to verify either side’s battlefield assertions.

PLATFORM TO DRIVE NORTH
Capturing Pokrovsk would give Moscow a platform to drive north toward the two biggest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in Donetsk — Kramatorsk and Sloviansk. It would also give Moscow its most important single territorial gain inside Ukraine since it took the ruined city of Avdiivka in early 2024.
In a break with the frontal assaults which Russian forces have used against other cities, Russia has used pincer movements to almost encircle Ukrainian forces in both Pokrovsk and the city of Kupiansk while small highly-mobile units and drones disrupted logistics and sowed chaos behind Ukrainian lines.
Russia’s tactics in both locations have created what Russian military bloggers call a grey zone of ambiguity where neither side had full control, but which was extremely difficult for Ukraine to defend.
Battlefield maps show that Russian forces are a few kilometers away from fully encircling Pokrovsk, known by Russia as Krasnoarmeysk, and control a significant part of Kupiansk where they are advancing on the main road to the city.
Pokrovsk, a road and rail hub in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, had a pre-war population of some 60,000 people. But most people have now fled, all children have been evacuated and few civilians remain amid its pulverised apartment buildings and cratered roads.
As well as trying to take the whole of Donbas, Russia has been making gradual advances in the Kharkiv and Dnipopetrovsk regions further west.
Russia’s military says it now controls more than 19 percent of Ukraine, or some 116,000 square km (44,800 square miles).
Ukrainian maps also show Russian control at around 19 percent of Ukraine, up 1 percent from Moscow’s position two years ago.