United Arab Airlines Flight 749

United Arab Airlines Flight 749 was a scheduled international passenger flight on 18 March 1966 that crashed while attempting to land in Cairo, Egypt. All thirty passengers and crew on board were killed.

United Arab Airlines Flight 749
A United Arab Airlines Antonov An-24 at Cairo, Flight 749's intended destination
Accident
Date18 March 1966
SummaryPilot error, poor weather
Sitenear Cairo, Egypt
Aircraft
Aircraft typeAntonov An-24
OperatorUnited Arab Airlines
RegistrationSU-AOA
Flight originNicosia Airport, Nicosia, Cyprus
DestinationCairo International Airport, Cairo, Egypt
Occupants30
Passengers25
Crew5
Fatalities30
Survivors0

Crash

Flight 749 took off from Nicosia Airport bound for Cairo International Airport. En route, the aircraft encountered bad weather, and conditions were poor in Cairo due to the presence of sandstorms. The crew of Flight 749 contacted Mirsair's Operations about diversion options. The flight crew also reported they were flying through thunderstorms with icing conditions, that two of the aircraft's altimeters were giving different readings, the magnetic compass being unserviceable, and that there was a crack in a cockpit window panel due to the thunderstorms. After diverting was discussed, Flight 749 continued to Cairo. The flight was cleared for a Runway 23 approach but crashed approximately 5 kilometres from it. Everyone on board Flight 749 perished in the accident.

After the crash, the sandstorm hampered rescue operations. Visibility was near zero and rescue vehicles became bogged down in the drifting sands.[1][2]

Among those killed in the crash was Yemen's Agriculture Minister, Ali Mohammad Abdou.[3]

Investigation

Accident investigators determined that "the accident arose from the descent of the aircraft below the safe flight altitude in the final approach and the impact of the port wing against the sand dunes lying to the northeast of the aerodrome. As a result the pilot lost control of his aircraft and hit the ground.

It is probable that the cause of descent of the aircraft below the safe level was due to the change from IFR to VFR, taking into consideration that considerable time would have been needed for the pilot to have adapted to this change in the prevailing weather conditions."[4]

gollark: - limited disruption, probably, as stuff can be split so stuff which really requires in-person access can be moved onto in-person days
gollark: ncurses.
gollark: - remote-learning stuff already battle-tested somewhat last academic year
gollark: - in-person school is going to be quite restrictive and not the same anyway
gollark: - not actually going in is going to be waaaay better than any mitigations they could come up with

See also

References

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