Write a report on US BANGLA Accident on 12th March in Nepal
Answers
Disclosed on April 12, the report found no fault of the US-Bangla plane but skipped two vital issues related to the airport authorities, according to a statement of the airlines, read out by its Chief Executive Officer Imran Asif at a press briefing at Hotel Sonargaon.
Firstly, the clumsy communications of the Nepal’s Airport Traffic Control (ATC) with the Pilot Abid Sultan while giving permission to land was not mentioned in the report, he said.
Secondly, he doubted the claim that a fire extinguishing team reached the spot within two minutes after the accident.
“We are doubtful about this information. Because, if the Nepal authorities had sent a fire extinguisher team to the spot within just two minutes, then lot of people would have been alive today,” the CEO said.
Confusing conversation between pilot, air traffic control before US-Bangla plane crash-lands in Kathmandu; 11 medical students among 21 Nepalese dead; shocked Hasina cuts short S'pore visit

Nepalese rescue workers gather around the debris of the US-Bangla plane that crashed at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu on Monday, March 14, 2018. Photo: AFP
Star Report
This is the deadliest civil aviation disaster in Bangladesh's history.
At least 49 people, including 26 Bangladeshis, were killed when an US-Bangla flight from Dhaka crashed in Kathmandu's Tribhuvan International Airport yesterday.

The dead include 21 Nepalese, one Chinese and a Maldivian, Rajkumer Chhetri, general manager of the airport, told this paper at 11:30pm yesterday.
According to him, 10 Bangladeshis and 12 Nepalese survived the crash.
Of the injured, 12 were undergoing treatment at the Kathmandu Medical College Hospital while five others at Norvic Hospital, journalists in Kathmandu told The Daily Star quoting officials.
At least 40 died at the scene, eight died at Kathmandu Medical College Hospital and one at Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital.
The US-Bangla Airlines flight BS211, a 76-seater Bombardier Dash 8 Q-400, slammed on an empty field, caught fire, and came to a rest on a football pitch. It left a trail of twisted metal and scattered luggage, they said.
Dark smoke billowed from the pitch on the east of the runway at Nepal's only international airport as rescuers tried to save people trapped inside the burning wreckage.
It was flying with 67 passengers, two pilots and two cabin crew members.
The cause of the crash could not be immediately known. However, an unverified audio clip of the conversation between the pilot and the air traffic controllers at the airport suggested confusion over landing clearance and on which end of the runway to land.