London- The London helicopter crash prompts safety questions. Questions have been raised over the safety of helicopter flights over
London as authorities clean up Thursday from a horrific crash that left
two people dead and sent fiery wreckage raining onto streets.
Dozens of people
evacuated from their homes are waiting to see when they can return after
the helicopter smashed into a crane atop a luxury high-rise development
by the Thames on Wednesday morning.
Debris remains scattered across rooftops around the crash scene, police said.
Ball of flames after London copter crash |
A cordon is in place,
while authorities collect evidence and work to make the area safe.
Transport is still disrupted, with several roads closed and bus services
diverted.
Witness: 'It was an enormous bang' |
Horrified onlookers
watched as the helicopter hit the crane amid low cloud and fog near
Vauxhall station, south of the river and not far from landmarks such as
the London Eye and the Houses of Parliament, and came plunging to the
ground.
The crash at the height
of the rush hour sent thick smoke and flames billowing into the sky,
with police saying it was a miracle there were not more casualties.
Helicopter pilot Pete
Barnes was one of the two people killed. His employers, RotorMotion,
paid tribute to the married father of two as "one of the most highly
qualified and highly skilled helicopter pilots in the UK."
The other victim was a man on the ground, named by police as 39-year-old Matthew Wood.
The crash left part of
the crane dangling precariously over the edge of the 52-story building,
the landmark St. George Wharf Tower, also known as the Vauxhall Tower.
Flaming wreckage also
landed on at least two vehicles on the ground. Ambulance workers said 12
people were injured, five of whom needed hospital care.
UK media reports said the crane operator had a lucky escape after arriving late for work.
The Air Accidents
Investigation Branch, part of the UK Department for Transport, is
investigating the crash, for which no cause has yet been given.
The accident has raised
the issue of how to ensure helicopter flights over the capital are safe,
particularly as high-rise developments mushroom near the Thames.
Speaking in Parliament
on Wednesday, lawmaker Kate Hoey, who represents Vauxhall, asked whether
"given London's changing skyline ... not today, but at some stage, we
will need to look much more closely at where, how and why helicopters
fly through our central city?"
Prime Minister David
Cameron responded that the question of flights over the capital "is
inevitably something that has to be carefully looked at" in light of the
crash.
Helicopter pilots in
central London are instructed to follow the Thames, to avoid flying over
built-up areas as far as possible. There is a heliport just along the
river from Vauxhall at Battersea.
But the surrounding area is set to be increasingly dominated by construction cranes.
A hitherto largely
industrial area between Vauxhall and Battersea has been earmarked as a
major riverside regeneration site, with plans to create 16,000 new
homes. A new U.S. Embassy building is also to set to open there.
The Civil Aviation
Authority said helicopters in London have only limited radar help and
fly mostly using visual reference points on the ground.
Nearly 170 flights
followed the central London route along the Thames in December, its
figures show. About 250 flights arrived and departed from the heliport
at Battersea in the same month.
Chris Yates, an aviation
security expert, told CNN it was likely there would be questions about
whether the helicopter that crashed should have been flying, given the
poor visibility Wednesday morning.
Source : CNN
Source : CNN
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