posted on Jun, 24 2005 @ 06:24 AM
28 November 1987 - SAA Helderberg Disaster
On this date at approximately seven miutes past midnight South African Airways Boeing 747-244B Combi crashed into the Indian ocean 134 nautical miles
north-east of the Plaisance Airport, Mauritius. None of the 140 passengers and 19 crew aboard survived.
Judge Margo was appointed to head a Board of Inquiry into the crash. The finding of the board was that the accident allowed an uncontrolled fire in
the forward right pallet on the main deck cargo compartment. The aircraft crashed into the sea at high speed following a loss of control following the
fire.
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SAA 'dragging feet' in Helderberg probe
Victims' families call for boycott
JOHANNESBURG -- Relatives of some of the 159 people who were killed when the South African Airways Helderberg crashed off the coast of Mauritius in
1987 on Saturday called on passengers to boycott the airline.
It followed a meeting of family representatives earlier in the week when they formed the Helderberg Truth Committee.
Chairman David Klatzow said the committee had the support of all but two of the South African victims' families.
"The committee and the family members call upon all decent people to make use wherever possible of airlines other than SAA to express their
displeasure at SAA failing to provide evidence crucial to the Margo Inquiry as well as expressing displeasure at the continued propensity of SAA to
transport military explosives aboard civilian airlines after the loss of the Helderberg," the committee said in a statement.
Executive vice-president of marketing and communication for SAA, Victor Nosi, denied the carrier transported explosives.
"As SAA we sympathise with the families for their loss and none of the current management had any involvement in the airline at the time."
Klatzow added the committee would demand all documents pertaining to the crash and would subpoena Transport Minister Dullah Omar either today or
tomorrow.
"The families decided unanimously in terms of their constitutional rights to demand from the minister (of transport) all documentation either in the
hands of the minister or the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to be made forthwith to the committee."
Omar is expected to receive a report on the crash from the CAA this month.
"The Truth Commission found 18 months ago that there was grounds for the investigation to be reopened because of the transportation of arms and jet
fuel by Armscor on SAA flights, but there has been a lot of dragging of feet," Klatzow said.
"Omar said he would leave no stone unturned in finding out the truth. Since then the delegation to the FBI brought back a scrambled version of the
(flight recorder) tape on a CD that was allegedly enhanced. However the CD enhanced by Jack Mitchell from the UK contained damaging information,"
Klatzow said.
The group is also trying to enlist the support of the Swiss, German and Taiwanese governments to have the investigation reopened.
Nationals from the three countries were among those killed in the crash.
The committee added: "The families furthermore call upon those pilots working for SAA and other airlines who have privately approached several
members of families claiming to have information, but who are unwilling to make any formal statement, to now come forward and make proper statements
and affix there signatures thereto."