Helicopter crash kills 4
The haunting final cries of the doomed Z-9 helicopter crew
echoed through villagers’ minds hours after the Chinese-made military
air craft crashed into a deep quarry outside the capital yesterday
morning.
Shortly before landing after a routine training flight, things went
badly wrong and the pilot began to quickly lose control, prompting
desperate pleas for help over the aircraft’s loudspeaker system,
witnesses and the sole survivor said.
“I heard them yelling for help. After that, I saw the helicopter
smash into the wall of the crater and drop down into the water,” said
Doung Kanha, 24, a villager who witnessed the crash while she was taking
out the rubbish. “I saw the crew member put his hand up and I thought
he was saying goodbye.”
Four bodies were recovered from the crash site and a fifth man
managed to survive by jumping from the Z-9 seconds before it struck the
side of a 40-metre cliff face surrounding a waterlogged quarry in
Dangkor district’s Prey Sar commune.
“I saw the tail of the helicopter out of the water … and two men swam
out from it, but then suddenly one man drowned along with the tail of
helicopter,” she said.
Military and police officials yesterday confirmed the dead as Ouk
Bunnaha, a brigadier general who commanded the Air Force’s helicopter
unit; Brigadier General Eang Vannarith; and trainee pilots Thorn Vanday
and Kham Bunnan.
The Z-9 was one of 12 helicopters bought with a $195 million loan
from China last year. Officials said yesterday it was the first time the
Z-9s had been used to train new pilots.
Minister of Defence Tea Banh, who arrived at the crash site at about
1:30pm, said that it was impossible that there would be any survivors.
“All we can do is search for the bodies, because the pit is very
deep. It is not a normal pit: it is a hellish pond. People sank into the
water, and there’s no way they could have survived in that water,” he
explained.
Banh said it was too early to draw any conclusions regarding what
caused the crash as the investigation was ongoing, but hinted at the
possibility of a design flaw or mechanical failure.
Major General Hul Sam Oun, commander of the 99 Infantry Battalion,
said the initial investigation had concluded “primarily that the reason
of the crash is because of engine failure”.
The brother of deceased trainer Eang Vannarith yesterday said he was
trained as a pilot in Russia and had clocked up an impressive number of
air miles, adding that the family depended on him to make a living.
“I am shocked. I heard of his friends dying in a plane crash at Bokor
resort, but now it is my brother’s turn,” he said. “I can’t believe
this happened to my family. He was the breadwinner after my parents
passed away. He was the one we depended on.”
Another witness, Sok Sambo, 39, said he thought a bomb had gone off
before he raced to help the sole survivor, Cheng Chan Sambo, who was
struggling to make his way out of the muddy quagmire.
“I heard a sound like a bomb going off,” he said, adding that he and
five other villagers rushed to help the survivor make it to shore. “When
he was saved, he couldn’t speak much and borrowed my phone to call his
workplace to tell them that his chopper had crashed.
Amateur footage of the crash aired on state broadcaster CNC last
night showed the Z-9 attempting to land before surging forward into the
quarry.
Villagers living near the quarry described rushing to the edge of the
huge crater when they heard one of the helicopters’ engines struggling.
Chan Sambo, the sole survivor of the deadly crash, was being treated
at Phnom Penh’s Calmette Hospital yesterday afternoon for minor injuries
sustained in his miraculous escape.
His aunt, Chhuon Eang, said she was thankful her nephew survived, apparently with only a few cuts and bruises.
“My nephew sustained only minor injuries. He just has scratches on
his forehead, feet and arms. The doctors at Calmette have been very
attentive, and now my nephew is on the mend,” she said.
As Chan Sambo slept, a hospital staff member, who requested anonymity
because she was not authorised to talk to the media, said that shortly
after his arrival, he told senior military officers visiting the ward
that the Z-9 suffered mechanical problems shortly after take-off.
“He described the incident to a senior RCAF official, saying that it
was his first training flight. His superior asked him to join the others
to see how it worked. But when the helicopter was taking off, it seemed
that the machine was having problems. Then the instructor attempted to
land and hit something causing an explosion before it sank into the
water,” she said.
The search for bodies and parts of the plane ended at 6pm while the
bodies were cleaned at the hospital before being sent to the families
for funerals to be held, according to Om Phy, Air Force deputy chief of
staff. “We deeply regret this tragedy.”
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