By STEPHANIE
ELIZAH
Above and below: The doomed Cessna 210 aircraft that crash-landed into Lelegwagwa waters, about 50m offshore. All five Australians on board escaped unhurt but were shaken and happy to be alive. – Pictures by RANDAL GANISI |
FIVE Australians escaped unhurt when
the Cessna 210 light aircraft they were travelling in ditched 50m offshore on
the coast of Lelegwagwa village, East Cape, Milne Bay, on Sunday
morning, The National reports.
Alotau’s Chief Sgt Gowa Mang said
yesterday three of the passengers were women while he named the pilot as Gregory
Brown, 50, of Hamilton,
Victoria, who was also the owner of
the Australian-based UH Ltd aircraft.
“They were on the last part of their
journey around the Pacific, visiting diving resorts, when the accident
happened,” he said.
Brown told police he experienced
problems with the engine and propeller so he had to a make a quick decision to
ditch the plane in the sea.
“They crash-landed on shallow waters
at Lelegwagwa with minimum damage to the plane. No one was hurt, but they were
shaken by the experience,” Mang said.
He added that it was a first-time
visit for the Australians to PNG after having been to Vanuatu and the Solomon
Islands.
“From Victoria, they travelled to the other two Pacific Islands before visiting Rabaul, Kavieng
and Tufi. They were on their way to Australia via Gurney Airport.”
Brown, a former police sergeant, had
remained in Alotau while his four passengers were transitting through Port Moresby yesterday on
their way home.
He was expected to assist with Civil
Aviation Authority investigations underway at the scene of the accident.
On Aug 31, three Australians and a
New Zealander died when their charter plane skidded off the runway in poor
conditions on Misima Island, Milne Bay.
They included the pilot-owner of the
airline which chartered the jet aircraft, Les
Wright.
The New
Zealand co-pilot was the only
survivor.
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