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Indian Airlines Flight 257

Coordinates: 24°49′12″N 93°57′00″E / 24.82000°N 93.95000°E / 24.82000; 93.95000
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:587:104:ca39:c48e:f577:dc61:8897 (talk) at 22:19, 19 February 2016 (Added in a licensed photograph of a similar aircraft to enhance the article, There were no injuries). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Indian Airlines Flight IC-257
An Indian Airlines Boeing 737-2A8 similar to the aircraft involved in the accident.
Accident
Date16 August 1991
SummaryControlled flight into terrain
SiteImphal, Manipur, India
Aircraft typeBoeing 737-2A8
OperatorIndian Airlines
Passengers63
Crew6
Fatalities69 (all)
Survivors0

Indian Airlines Flight 257 was a flight on 16 August 1991 that crashed on its descent into Imphal, India, killing all 69 occupants.

The flight, operating on the Calcutta-Imphal route, crashed into Thangjing hills, about 37 kilometres (23 mi) south-west of the Imphal airport. The aircraft had started the short flight from Calcutta around 12:00 pm and it began a descent into Imphal airport at around 12:41 pm. Visibility at that time was 7 kilometres (4.3 mi). Imphal airport lost contact with the aircraft just after 12:45, at 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) altitude on the Instrument Landing System. The search and rescue efforts were hampered by bad weather conditions and a hilly and slushy terrain.[1]

The probable cause of the crash was attributed to an "error on the part of the Pilot-in-Command in not adhering to the operational flight plan and ILS let down chart and not realizing that his early descent to 10,000 feet (3,000 m) and turning right for outbound leg without reporting overhead VOR would result in loss of time reference and as such misplace him in the hilly terrain. The Pilot-in-Command's action may have been influenced by his extreme familiarity with the terrain".

Indian Airlines paid compensation to the families of the deceased at the rate of 500,000 Indian Rupees (roughly US$17,000[2] during the 1991 India economic crisis) for each adult passenger and 250,000 for the one infant passenger.[3]

See also

References

24°49′12″N 93°57′00″E / 24.82000°N 93.95000°E / 24.82000; 93.95000