European air authority to recommend 2 crew in cockpit
BY Agencies28 March 2015 6:42 AM IST
Agencies28 March 2015 6:42 AM IST
Europe’s aviation safety agency will recommend on Friday that airlines across the continent always have two people in the cockpit of a flying aircraft, according to Scandinavian authorities.
Airlines and officials around the world are starting to impose the rule after details emerged that the co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525 had apparently locked himself in the cockpit and deliberated crashed the plane into the mountains below.
Scandinavian Airlines group spokesman Henrik Edstrom told The Associated Press the carrier had received a draft of the recommendation from the European Aviation Safety Agency through Swedish transport authorities.
Henrik Olars of the Swedish Transport Agency confirmed they got it from the Germany-based EASA.
“We always follow the recommendations we get from the national authorities, which in turn got it from the European agency,” Edstrom said.
A draft recommendation was going around but had not been an approved yet, according to the Association of European Airlines that groups 29 major European airlines.
“EASA will be release it later Friday,” said Henrik Olars of the Swedish Transport Agency
EASA spokesman Ilias Maragakis called it “an ongoing process” and all stakeholders needed to be heard.
German airline Germania, which flies to more than 140 destinations in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, introduced the two-person rule with immediate effect.
Airlines and officials around the world are starting to impose the rule after details emerged that the co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525 had apparently locked himself in the cockpit and deliberated crashed the plane into the mountains below.
Scandinavian Airlines group spokesman Henrik Edstrom told The Associated Press the carrier had received a draft of the recommendation from the European Aviation Safety Agency through Swedish transport authorities.
Henrik Olars of the Swedish Transport Agency confirmed they got it from the Germany-based EASA.
“We always follow the recommendations we get from the national authorities, which in turn got it from the European agency,” Edstrom said.
A draft recommendation was going around but had not been an approved yet, according to the Association of European Airlines that groups 29 major European airlines.
“EASA will be release it later Friday,” said Henrik Olars of the Swedish Transport Agency
EASA spokesman Ilias Maragakis called it “an ongoing process” and all stakeholders needed to be heard.
German airline Germania, which flies to more than 140 destinations in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, introduced the two-person rule with immediate effect.
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