Linate Airport disaster

The Linate Airport disaster occurred in Italy at Linate Airport in Milan on the morning of Monday, 8 October 2001. Scandinavian Airlines System Flight 686, a McDonnell Douglas MD-87 airliner carrying 110 people bound for Copenhagen, Denmark, collided on take-off with a Cessna Citation CJ2[1]:1 business jet carrying four people bound for Paris, France. All 114 people on both aircraft were killed, as well as four people on the ground.[3][4][5]

Linate Airport disaster
Scandinavian Airlines System Flight 686 · Air Evex D-IEVX
A map of Linate Airport. The blue line marks the path of the MD-87. The green line marks the intended path of the Cessna, while the red line shows its actual one.
Accident
Date8 October 2001 (2001-10-08)
SummaryRunway collision in poor visibility and inadequate taxiway signage
SiteLinate Airport, Milan, Italy
45°26′54″N 009°16′36″E
Total fatalities118
Total injuries4
First aircraft

Lage Viking, the MD-87 involved, seen at Copenhagen Airport, in 2000
TypeMcDonnell Douglas MD-87
NameLage Viking
OperatorScandinavian Airlines System
IATA flight No.SK686
ICAO flight No.SAS686
Call signSCANDINAVIAN 686
RegistrationSE-DMA
Flight originLinate Airport
Milan, Italy
DestinationCopenhagen Airport
Copenhagen, Denmark
Occupants110
Passengers104
Crew6
Fatalities110
Survivors0
Second aircraft

A Cessna Citation CJ2
similar to the one involved
TypeCessna Citation CJ2
OperatorAir Evex[1]:174[2]
Call signDELTA INDIA ECHO VICTOR X-RAY
RegistrationD-IEVX
Flight originLinate Airport
Milan, Italy
DestinationLe Bourget Airport
Paris, France
Occupants4
Passengers2
Crew2
Fatalities4 (Initially 1)
Survivors0 (Initially 3)
Ground casualties
Ground fatalities4
Ground injuries4

The subsequent investigation determined that the collision was caused by a number of nonfunctioning and nonconforming safety systems, standards, and procedures at the airport.[1]:125[6] It remains the deadliest accident in Italian aviation history.

Aircraft and crew

Two aircraft were involved in the collision. The larger of the two aircraft was a McDonnell-Douglas MD-87. The cockpit crew consisted of Captain Joakim Gustafsson and First Officer Anders Hyllander, both aged 36. The Captain was hired by SAS in 1990 and had more than 5,800 hours of flight time. He had logged approximately 230 hours in the MD-87. The first officer was hired by the airline in 1997. At the time of the accident, he had more than 4,300 total flying hours. He was more experienced in the aircraft type than his captain, having logged 2,000 hours of flight time in the MD-87.[1]:125[6]

The second aircraft was a Cessna Citation 525-A. There were two German pilots aboard. The captain, 36-year-old Horst Königsmann, had approximately 5,000 total flight hours logged, of which roughly 2,400 were accumulated in the Citation. The first officer, 64-year-old Martin Schneider, had approximately 12,000 flight hours' experience, of which 2,000 hours were in the Citation.[1]:125[6] One of the passengers was Luca Fossati, chairman of Star – Stabilimento Alimentare S.p.A. and owner of the Citation.[7][8]

Accident

The Monday morning accident occurred in thick fog, with visibility reduced to less than 200 metres (660 ft).

The Cessna Citation was instructed to taxi from the western apron along the northern taxiway (taxiway R5),[1]:22 and then via the northern apron to the main taxiway which runs parallel to Runway 36R,[1]:24 a route that would have kept it clear of 36R. Instead, the pilot taxied along the southern taxi route (taxiway R6),[1]:23 crossing Runway 36R toward the main taxiway which lay beyond it (see diagram).[1]:24

At 08:09:28, the MD-87 was given clearance by a different controller to take off from Runway 36R.[1]:24–25 Fifty-three seconds later, the MD-87 aircraft, traveling at about 150 knots (280 km/h; 170 mph), collided with the Cessna. One of the four people in the Cessna was killed on impact; the remaining three died in the subsequent fire. The MD-87 lost its right engine; the pilot, Joakim Gustafsson, attempted to take off, reaching an altitude of approximately 12 metres (40 ft). The remaining engine lost some thrust due to debris ingestion, and the plane, having lost the right landing gear, came down. Gustafsson applied thrust reverser and brakes, and tried to guide the plane through its control surfaces. This was insufficient to halt the jet's momentum, and it crashed into a luggage hangar located near the runway's end, at a speed of approximately 136 knots (252 km/h; 157 mph). In the impact, all the MD-87's crew and passengers were killed. The crash and subsequent fire killed four Italian ground personnel in the hangar, and injured four more.[9]

Of the occupants of the MD-87, 54 (46%), mainly in the back of the aircraft, suffered severe burns; their bodies were identified using forensic dentistry or DNA records. Those in the front of the aircraft suffered severe blunt trauma.[9] All of the occupants of the MD-87 were killed by impact, not fire.[1]:75

Causes

The accident occurred less than a month after the September 11 attacks and the day after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan began, but the Italian government was quick to rule out a terrorist attack as the cause.[10][11][12][13] This was subsequently confirmed by the investigations that followed.[1]:125[6]

The accident was investigated by the National Agency for the Safety of Flight (ANSV). The ANSV's final report was published on 20 January 2004 and concluded that the "immediate cause" of the accident was the incursion of the Cessna aircraft onto the active runway. However, the ANSV stopped short of placing the blame entirely on the Cessna pilots, who had become lost in the fog. Their report identified a number of deficiencies in the airport layout and procedures.[1][14][15]

Linate Airport was operating without a functioning ground radar system at the time, despite having had a new system approved on 30 March 1995. The previous system had been decommissioned on 29 November 1999, but the replacement had not been fully installed.[1]:45,46 The new system finally came online a few months later. Guidance signs along the taxiways were obscured, or badly worn, and were later found not to meet regulations. After the pilots mistakenly turned onto the R6 taxiway that led to the runway, there were no signs by which they could recognize where they were. When they stopped at a taxiway stop-marking, and correctly reported its identifier, S4, the ground controller disregarded this identification because it was not on his maps and was unknown to him. Motion sensing runway incursion alarms, although present, had been deactivated to prevent false alarms from vehicles, or animals. The ground controller's verbal directions used terminology to designate aprons, taxiways, and runways, which did not match their on-the-ground signage and labels. Lastly, neither pilot of the Cessna was certified for landings with visibility less than 500 metres (1,600 ft), but had landed at the airport anyway an hour before the disaster with a visibility reported by air traffic control of 100 metres (330 ft) .[1]:125[6]

Aftermath

On 16 April 2004, a Milan court found four persons guilty for the disaster. Airport director Vincenzo Fusco and air-traffic controller Paolo Zacchetti were both sentenced to eight years in prison. Francesco Federico, former head of the airport, and Sandro Gualano, former head of the air traffic control agency, received sentences of six and a half years.[16] The pardon law issued by the Italian Parliament on 29 July 2006 reduced all convictions by three years. On 7 July 2006, Fusco and Federico were acquitted by the Milan Appeals Court. The controller Zacchetti's sentence was reduced to three years. In addition three more people were sentenced for multiple manslaughter and negligent disaster: former ENAV director general Fabio Marzocca to four years and four months, and; former SEA airports agency officials Antonio Cavanna and Lorenzo Grecchi each to three years and three months. On 20 February 2008 the Supreme Court of Cassation upheld the acquittal of Fusco and Federico and confirmed five convictions.[17] (Initially, in late 2002, eleven officials and functionaries had been charged with manslaughter.[18])

The initial eight-year sentence for Zacchetti prompted outrage among air traffic controllers.[19] His sentence has been questioned in aviation safety law commentary.[20]

Victims

NationalitySAS 686CessnaGroundTotal
PassengersCrewPassengersCrew
Denmark16300019
Finland600006
Germany000202
Italy58020464
Norway300003
Romania100001
South Africa100001
Sweden17300020
United Kingdom2 *00002
Total1046224118
* One passenger listed as a Briton by SAS held United Kingdom and United States citizenships.[21]

Victims of the crash included nationals of nine different countries.[21][22][23] Most of the victims were Italian and Scandinavian.

Four memorial services were held in honour of the SAS MD-87 victims. On 12 October, three separate ceremonies were held, with one in Denmark, one in Norway, and one in Sweden. On 13 October, a fourth ceremony was held in Italy.[24]

In March 2002, a forest containing 118 beech trees called Bosco dei Faggi was inaugurated as a memorial to the victims in the Forlanini Park near the airport. A sculpture by the Swedish artist Christer Bording donated by SAS, called Infinity Pain, was placed in the centre of the forest.

The disaster devastated the Swedish go-kart community as some of the country's most promising young drivers were on the flight after attending an event in Lonato. After the disaster, the Swedish national motorsports club started a memorial fund together with some of the relatives. The fund awards annual stipends to promising Swedish youth in go-kart.[25]

Dramatization

In 2012 the accident was featured on the 11th season of the Discovery Channel Canada / National Geographic TV series Mayday, in an episode entitled "The Invisible Plane". The episode featured interviews with accident investigators, and a dramatization of the crash and investigation.[26]

See also

Notes

  1. "Accident Boeing MD-87 SE-DMA Cessna 525-A D-IEVX Milano Linate airport October 8, 2001" (PDF). National Agency for the Safety of Flight. 20 January 2004. A-1-04. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  2. "ANSV final report, appendix I" (PDF). ANSV. 20 January 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  3. "114 die when jet hits plane, then rams building in Milan". Deseret News. (Salt Lake City, Utah, USA). Associated Press. 8 October 2001. p. A2.
  4. "Planes collide on Italian runway; 114 are killed". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon, USA). Associated Press. 9 October 2001. p. 10A.
  5. "Wrong turn by Cessna likely caused Italy crash". Deseret News. (Salt Lake City, Utah, USA). Associated Press. 9 October 2001. p. A4.
  6. "Relazione Finale" (PDF). p. 125. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  7. Henneberger, Melinda (9 October 2001). "Small Plane Collides With Jet on Milan Runway; 118 Die". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  8. Boudreaux, Richard (10 October 2001). "Italy Probe Points to Cessna Pilot". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  9. Schmitt, Aurore; Cunha, Eugenia; Pinheiro, João (9 November 2007). Forensic Anthropology and Medicine: Complementary Sciences From Recovery to Cause of Death. Springer Science & Business Media. Humana Press. p. 440. ISBN 978-1-59745-099-7.
  10. Jets collide on Milan runway; 118 killed, USA Today.
  11. Scores die in runway blaze, BBC.
  12. Broken radar was factor in Italian crash, BBC.
  13. SAS backs Linate over safety, CNN. Archived 7 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  14. Final accident report Archived 17 December 2013 at the Wayback MachineAgenzia Nazionale per la Sicurezza del Volo.
  15. Italian Report on the disaster (in Italian).
  16. http://www.comitato8ottobre.com/download/processo/it/86Sentenza%20LINATE%2015.7.04.doc
  17. Landucci, Roberto (20 February 2008). "Court upholds 5 convictions in Italian air crash". Reuters. Archived from the original on 16 August 2021.
  18. "Air Controllers Facing Charges in Milan Crash That Killed 118". The New York Times. 28 December 2002. p. A9. ISSN 0362-4331.
  19. "ATC body blasts Linate verdicts". FlightGlobal. 27 April 2004.
  20. Pellegrino, Francesca (9 September 2019). "4.1.1: Just Culture vs Blame Culture in Aviation - the Linate Disaster"". The Just Culture Principles in Aviation Law: Towards a Safety-Oriented Approach. Legal Studies in International, European and Comparative Criminal Law. Vol. 3. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature. pp. 86–88. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-23178-1. ISBN 978-3-030-23177-4. S2CID 203112177.
  21. "British plane crash victims named". BBC News. BBC. 10 October 2001. Archived from the original on 24 November 2014. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  22. "Passenger and Crew List Scandinavian Airlines Flight SK 686" (Archive). Scandinavian Airlines. 8 October 2001. Retrieved on 12 May 2010.
  23. "SK686 Update: Nationality Distribution" (Archive). Scandinavian Airlines. 10 October 2001. Retrieved on 12 May 2010.
  24. "Memorial Service for the casualties in Milan" (Archive). Scandinavian Airlines. 11 October 2001. Retrieved on 12 May 2010.
  25. "Home page". Anecto Racing (in Swedish). Anecto Racing Minnesfond. Archived from the original on 23 February 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2009.
  26. "The Invisible Plane". Mayday. Season 11. 2012. Discovery Channel Canada / National Geographic Channel.

References

National Agency for the Safety of Flight

Scandinavian Airlines

Other

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