Garuda Indonesia Flight 152
Garuda Indonesia Flight 152 was a scheduled domestic Indonesian passenger flight from Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Jakarta to Polonia International Airport in Medan, North Sumatra. It was flown using an Airbus A300B4 registered PK-GAI and operated Garuda Indonesia.
Accident summary | |
---|---|
Date | 26 September 1997 |
Summary | Controlled flight into terrain due to pilot error, ATC error, and GPWS malfunction |
Place | Near Pancur Batu, Deli Serdang, North Sumatra, Indonesia 03°20′28.2″N 98°34′26.6″E / 3.341167°N 98.574056°ECoordinates: 03°20′28.2″N 98°34′26.6″E / 3.341167°N 98.574056°E |
Passengers | 222 |
Crew | 12 |
Fatalities | 234 |
Survivors | 0 |
Aircraft type | Airbus A300B4-220 |
Airline/user | Garuda Indonesia |
Registration | PK-GAI |
Flew from | Soekarno-Hatta Int'l Airport, Jakarta, Indonesia |
Flying to | Polonia Int'l Airport, Medan, Indonesia |
On September 26, 1997, Flight 152, piloted by Hance Rahmowiyogo, crashed into mountainous woodlands 30 miles (48 km) from Medan during low visibility caused by the 1997 Southeast Asian haze. All 234 passengers and crew were killed in the disaster.[1] Rahmowiyogo, age 42, had over 20 years of flying experience at Garuda Indonesia and over 12,000 flying hours. The crash site was in a ravine near the village of Buah Nabar in the Sibolangit district south of Medan.[2]
Flight 152 remains the deadliest single-plane crash in Indonesia, and the deadliest aviation accident in 1997.
Garuda Indonesia Flight 152 Media
- Wiweko Soepono and Airbus test pilot Pierre Baud in Airbus A300 FFCC Cockpit.jpg
The Flight Deck of an Airbus A300B4-220 with the Forward Facing Crew Cockpit or FFCC conversion. While modified for two crew operation, the FFCC does not have the electronic instrumentation of the Airbus A300-600 model.
References
- ↑ Seth Mydan (September 27, 1997). "Indonesia Jet Crash Kills All 234 Aboard; Haze Was a Possible Cause". The New York Times. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
- ↑ "Accident Photo: Garuda Indonesia 152 - Airbus A300 PK-GAI". AirDisaster.Com. September 26, 1997. Archived from the original on May 15, 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2014.