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LOT Polish Airlines Flight 703

Coordinates: 50°06′05″N 22°19′25″E / 50.10139°N 22.32361°E / 50.10139; 22.32361
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Why can't I edit Userpedia? (talk | contribs) at 03:01, 21 May 2020 (There were 2 cabin crew, not 4 cabin crew. So, 2 + 2 = 4.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

LOT Flight 703
A LOT Polish Airlines Antonov AN-24 similar to the one which had accident
Accident
Date2 November 1988
SummaryIcing causing engine failure
SiteBiałobrzegi, Poland
50°06′05″N 22°19′25″E / 50.10139°N 22.32361°E / 50.10139; 22.32361
Aircraft
Aircraft typeAntonov An-24B
Aircraft nameDunajec
OperatorLOT Polish Airlines
RegistrationSP-LTD
Flight originOkecie Airport
DestinationRzeszów Airport
Occupants29
Passengers25
Crew4
Fatalities1
Survivors28

LOT Polish Airlines Flight 703 was a plane that crash-landed about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north of Rogóżno railway station, on 2 November 1988. In the accident one person was killed and several were seriously injured.

Flight

The plane, an Antonov An-24W, registered SP-LTD, named "Dunajec", took off from Okęcie airport, Warsaw for regional flight 703 to Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport. It had 25 passengers on board (including the famous radio presenter Tomasz Beksiński) and four crew members. The captain was Kazimierz Rożek (with 30 years of experience) and the co-pilot was Waldemar Wolski. The emergency started about two minutes before the planned landing, at 10:25, when the plane was flying east to runway 27. According to officials, pilots turned on the anti-icing installation too late and, during approach, both engines immediately shut down because of icing of the engine intakes. Just after that, Rożek and Wolski, knowing that they would not reach the airport, started an emergency descent, which ended in a glade.

Crash-landing and evacuation

The aircraft landed on a glade at high speed [citation needed]. It became airborne above a drainage ditch and crashed further on. In the moment of crash-landing, one person – a 69-year-old woman from Rzeszów – was killed. Within several seconds after the crash, two stewardesses and two militia officers evacuated all passengers from the aircraft, which quickly caught on fire.

Aftermath

The crash-landing has been the last fatal air crash in Polish commercial aviation so far. It was one of the main reasons for which LOT Polish Airlines removed all An-24 served planes (this particular aircraft was 22 years old) and replaced them with ATR 42 and ATR 72.

References