Islanders turn up in force to send
off crash victims
By STEPHANIE
ELIZAH
MISIMA Islanders were in mourning as
they turned up yesterday at Bwagaioa station to say goodbye to four expatriates
who were killed in a plane crash on Tuesday, The National reports.
Government offices, businesses and
schools on this Milne Bay island were closed as islanders and
public servants paid their respect to the victims of the
crash.
The laid-back island has suddenly
become the focus of world attention 48 hours earlier when a Cessna Citation jet,
with three Australians and two New Zealanders, crashed upon landing in bad
weather.
The islanders came in droves, in
their best dress, to farewell the four people whom many of them had probably
never met.
School children led the farewell
entourage, forming a “guard of honour” from the island’s health centre morgue to
the airport where a Airlines PNG Twin Otter was waiting to take the bodies to
Port
Moresby .
The line stretched about 500m
between the morgue and the airstrip. All district administration vehicles also
lined up for the farewell.
The islanders sang traditional
hymns, some shed tears and many threw flowers on the path leading to the waiting
aircraft.
The bodies, wrapped in body-bags,
were carried by district health and administration
workers.
“We were preparing the bodies when
school children and public servants lined up to pay their last respect,”
Samarai-Murua district administrator Hayden Abraham said from
Misima.
Shortly after midday, the Twin Otter
left for Port
Moresby where the bodies will be treated and handed over
to their immediate family members.
In Port Moresby , investigators announced that the
Trans Air Citation jet’s black box had been recovered from the crash
site.
This instrument, which records
operation details of the aircraft, will help investigators better un-derstand
the cause of the crash which killed the four and injured the 25-year-old
co-pilot of the chartered aircraft.
Civil Aviation Accident
Investigation Commission chief executive officer David Inau said five
investigators had been assigned to the case.
“I have formally invited the
Australian transport safety bureau to assist with the investigations. I have
already a team of three on site working with us,” he
said.
The Australian High Commission said
those who died were Port Moresby-based Trans Air co-owner Lesley Wright, Richard
“Chris” Hart and Darren Moore. A New Zealand citizen killed was
unnamed.
Co-pilot Kelby Cheyne survived the
crash.
Commission officials and a medical
team travelled to Misima to assist with Cheyne’s medical evacuation and to
facilitate the repatriation of the remains of the deceased.
It said it was working with police
and local authorities to have the remains repatriated to Australia at the
earliest opportunity.
The high commission said consular
officers in Port Moresby and Canberra were working with
the airline company and local authorities to keep the families of those affected
by the crash informed on developments.
Officials were also in contact with
their New
Zealand
counterparts.
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