Among 3 Aussies and Kiwi killed was
Trans Air co-owner
By STEPHANIE
ELIZAH
AMONG those killed in the plane
crash on Misima in Milne Bay was Les Wright, the co-owner of Trans
Air, which ran the charter, The National reports.
Wright, 59, was from Queensland , Australia .
The others were identified as Chris
Hart, 61, from Sydney, and Darren Moore, 44, from Leonora in Western Australia , who
was a civil aviation flight operations inspector.
The name of the fourth victim, an
employee of medivac company International SOS, a New Zealander, was not
released.
The survivor, another New Zealander
who is a permanent resident of Australia , arrived in Port
Moresby yesterday afternoon on a chartered flight from Misima Island .
The unnamed 25-year-old co-pilot of
the doomed Cessna Citation was immediately whisked onto another plane and flown
to Australia for medical treatment for
“heavy bruising”.
Trans Air (PNG), a charter and
medivac operator, is linked to the now-defunct Australian airline Transair,
which went into liquidation after a 2005 crash at Lockhart River in north Queensland , killing 15
people.
Investigations have begun into the
crash, which occurred on Tuesday afternoon.
The bodies of the four are at the
morgue at Misima Hospital and would be flown to Port Moresby
today.
Around 4pm yesterday, a chartered
Airlines PNG Twin Otter arrived in Port
Moresby with the injured co-pilot, heavily
sedated.
Local and international media were
locked out of the Trans Air hangar at the airport by security
guards.
Accident Investigation Commission
(AIC) chief executive officer David Inau confirmed “that a Cessna Citation jet
ran off the end of the runway on landing”.
Inau gave no further details, only
stating that “until all findings have been gathered and finalised, then a
formal statement will be made”.
Civil Aviation Safety Authority and
AIC investigators were accompanied by Australian officials to the crash site
yesterday.
They would try and establish the
cause
of the
accident.
Australian leaders, including prime
minister Julia Gillard and foreign affairs and trade minister Stephen Smith,
yesterday expressed sorrow at the loss of their citizens’
lives.
“On behalf of the government, I
offer my condolences to the families of the three Australians that will be
grieving the loss of a loved one today,” Gillard told reporters in
Australia
yesterday.
“I also offer our condolences to the
New
Zealand family that has lost a loved one.
“And, I wish a speedy recovery and a
return to good health to the New Zealand citizen, Australian
resident who has been injured.”
Smith said the tragedy came just
weeks after the first anniversary of the Kokoda plane crash in which nine
Australians died.
“This will be a very sad reminder to
nine Australian families,” Smith said.
“It follows on very closely from the
first anniversary of the Kokoda air crash, so this will be painful not just for
the families of the five involved but a painful reminder of the Kokoda air
crash.”
Smith confirmed that the plane was
chartered by Trans Air and one of those killed was employed by the company but
he would not say whether it was its owner Wright.
However, an industry source told
AAP: “Les Wright from Trans Air was on board and
died.”
The foreign minister said he had
spoken to the Australian acting high commissioner in PNG and was told
“everything that Australian officials can do is being done both on the ground in
Misima and Port
Moresby ”.
Smith said the Australian Transport
Safety Bureau had offered assistance in any formal investigation into the cause
of the crash.
“We regrettably have a lot of
experience with plane crashes in PNG and we have in the past, and I expect on
this occasion, will work closely and successfully with PNG officials,” he
said.
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