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Royal Air Maroc Flight 630

Coordinates:30°36′00″N9°19′00″W / 30.60000°N 9.31667°W /30.60000; -9.31667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1994 deliberate plane crash in Morocco

Royal Air Maroc Flight 630
CN-CDT, the aircraft involved in the crash
Occurrence
Date21 August 1994 (1994-08-21)
SummarySuicide by pilot
Site
Map
Aircraft
Aircraft typeATR 42-312
OperatorRoyal Air Maroc
Call signROYAL AIR MAROC 630
RegistrationCN-CDT
Flight originAl Massira International Airport,Agadir, Morocco
DestinationMohamed V Airport,Casablanca, Morocco
Occupants44
Passengers40
Crew4
Fatalities44
Survivors0

Royal Air Maroc Flight 630 was a passenger flight on 21 August 1994 which crashed approximately ten minutes after takeoff fromAgadir–Al Massira Airport inMorocco. All 44 passengers and crew on board were killed. It was the deadliestATR 42 aircraft crash at that point in time. An investigation showed that the crash wasdeliberately caused by one of the pilots.

Background

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Aircraft

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The aircraft involved was an ATR 42-312 which had its maiden flight on 20 January 1989. The aircraft was delivered to Royal Air Maroc on 24 March the same year. The aircraft was powered by twoPratt & Whitney Canada PW120turboprop engines.[citation needed]

Crew

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The captain was 32-year-old Younes Khayati, who had 4,500 flight hours. The first officer was Sofia Figuigui.[1]

Flight

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Victims' nationalities
NationalityPassengersCrewTotal
Morocco20424
Italy8-8
France5-5
Netherlands4-4
Kuwait2-2
United States1-1
Total40444[2]

Flight 630 was a scheduled flight fromAgadir, Morocco toCasablanca using an ATR 42 aircraft. At approximately 10 minutes into the flight while climbing through 16,000 feet (4,900 m), the aircraft entered a steep dive, and crashed into a region of theAtlas Mountains about 32 kilometres (20 mi; 17 nmi) north of Agadir.

The crash site was at Douar Izounine, about 32 kilometres (20 mi; 17 nmi) north of Agadir. Among the 40 passengers on board were a Kuwaiti prince and his wife. The prince was the brother ofSabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, then Kuwait's minister of defence.[2]

Investigation

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The commission that investigated the crash determined it to bepilot suicide.[3] Flight recorder data revealed that the ATR 42'sautopilot was intentionally disconnected by Captain Khayati, who then deliberately put the aircraft into a dive.[4] Evidence also showed that during the descent, First Officer Figuigui had sent out distress calls once aware of the captain's intentions.[5] The Moroccan pilots union disputed the suicide explanation, claiming that Captain Khayati was mentally fit and showed no signs of frustration, and instead claiming that Captain Khayati reported a "technical problem" prior to takeoff, although the investigative commission never found evidence supporting this claim.[6][7] The crash was the deadliest incident involving anATR 42 aircraft at that point in time.[8]

See also

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Specific incidents

Portals:

References

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  1. ^"Pilot's Death Wish Doomed Moroccan Plane; Romantic Problems Cited".AP NEWS. Rabat, Morocco: Associated Press. Archived fromthe original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved14 December 2019.
  2. ^ab"Kuwaiti Prince dies in crash".The Daily Telegraph.Associated Press. 23 August 1994. p. 5. Retrieved5 November 2013 – via Google News.
  3. ^"Crash that killed 44 was pilot suicide".Altus Times.Associated Press. 25 August 1994. p. 14. Retrieved5 November 2013 – via Google News.
  4. ^Sinha, Shreeya (26 March 2015)."A History of Crashes Caused by Pilots' Intentional Acts".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved18 April 2015.Moroccan authorities said that Younes Khayati, 32, the pilot of a Royal Air Maroc ATR-42 aircraft, intentionally disconnected the plane's automatic navigation systems on Aug. 21, 1994, and crashed the plane into the Atlas Mountains shortly after takeoff, killing all 44 people aboard. ...
  5. ^"Air crash 'was pilot suicide'".The Independent. 25 August 1994. Retrieved9 June 2022.
  6. ^Ranter, Harro."ASN Aircraft accident ATR 42-312 CN-CDT Tizounine".aviation-safety.net. Retrieved28 September 2022.
  7. ^"Prove suicide accusation, union tells crash probers".The Deseret News.Associated Press. 27 August 1994. p. A4. Retrieved5 November 2013 – via Google News.
  8. ^Ranter, Harro."Incident description".aviation-safety.net.Aviation Safety Network.

External links

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Aviation accidents and incidents in Morocco
1950s–1960s
1970s
1980s–1990s
21st century
Asterisks (*) = occurred in theWestern Sahara
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