Air France accidents and incidents

Air France has been in operation since 1933. Its aircraft have been involved in a number of major accidents and incidents. A selected list of the most noteworthy of these events is given below.

1930s

15 January 1934
A Dewoitine D.332 (F-AMMY, named Emeraude) crashed on a flight from Saigon to Paris. The flight crashed at Corbigny, France after flying into a snowstorm, killing all 10 passengers and crew on board.[1]
9 May 1934
A Wibault 282T-12 (F-AMHP) crashed into the English Channel off Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom, killing all six people on board.
19 May 1934
A Golden Clipper crash-landed on a cricket pitch adjacent to Croydon Airport, Surrey, United Kingdom, due to fuel exhaustion. Only one of the ten people on board was injured.[2]
21 January 1936
A CAMS 53 (F-AJIR) disappeared off the coast of Corsica with six on board after sending a distress signal.[3]
7 December 1936
A Latécoère 300 (F-AKGF) disappeared off Dakar with five on board after the pilot messaged "we have switched off the rear engine". Aviator Jean Mermoz was among the dead.[4]
8 December 1937
A Potez 621 (F-AOTZ) crashed at Valence, Drome in bad weather, killing two of seven on board.[5]
9 February 1938
A Liore et Olivier H.242/1 (F-ANPB, named Ville de Bone) crashed at Etang de Berre after striking the breakwater in fog, killing seven of 14 on board.[6]
7 March 1938
A Potez 62 (F-ANQR, named La Tapageuse) crashed shortly after takeoff from Dum Dum Airport, India, while operating a Hanoi-Calcutta-Paris service, killing all seven on board.[7]
27 January 1939
A Potez 62 (F-ANPJ, named Courlis) crashed near Butzweilerhof Airfield, Germany, killing the four crew.[8]
3 April 1939
A Caudron C.635 Simoun (F-AOOT) crashed into a mountain near Marrakech, Morocco, killing all nine on board.[9]
2 May 1939
A Dewoitine D.338 (F-ARIC) crashed near Argana, Morocco due to icing, killing all nine on board.[10]

1940s

3 March 1940
A Bloch MB.220 (F-AOHA) struck a mountain near Orange, France in bad weather, killing the three crew.[11]
20 June 1940
A Dewoitine D.338 (F-ARTD) was inadvertently shot down by French anti-air fire and crashed near Ouistreham, killing the pilot.[12]
7 July 1940
A Dewoitine D.338 (F-AQBA) was shot down by a Japanese fighter and crashed in the Gulf of Tonkin, killing the four crew.[13]
10 October 1940
A Dewoitine D.338 (F-AQBJ) crashed at Carnotville, Benin, killing the three crew.[14]
27 November 1940
An SNCAC NC.223.4 (F-AROA, Le Verrier) crashed into the Mediterranean Sea while on a mail flight from Marseille to Beirut and Damascus, killing all six passengers and crew on board. The aircraft likely strayed into the battle zone off Cape Spartivento where it was shot down.[15]
1 September 1941
A Bloch MB.220 (F-AQNL) crashed into a lake near Bollemont after an engine failed on takeoff, killing 15 of 17 on board.[16]
13 August 1942
A Liore et Olivier H-246.1 (F-AREJ) was attacked by RAF Hawker Hurricane fighters; it managed to land at Algiers but sank after landing, killing four.[17]
27 September 1942
A Dewoitine D.342 (F-ARIZ) crashed after takeoff from Maison Blanche Airport, killing all 25 on board.[18]
13 January 1943
A Lockheed 14H2 Super Electra (F-ARRF) crashed at Aguelhok, Mali due to engine failure, killing the three crew.[19]
10 September 1945
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAJP) was written off at Le Bourget Airport.[20]
31 October 1945
A Latécoère 631 flying boat (F-BANT) made an emergency landing at Laguna de Rocha, Uruguay. The propeller of the number three engine separated, causing debris to strike the number two engine. A propeller blade penetrated the fuselage, cutting a 3 meter size hole and starting a small fire. Two passengers died.[21]
25 December 1945
A Lockheed C-60A Lodestar (F-BALV) leased from the Minister of Air (but operating for Air France) crashed 38 mi west of Bangui, Central African Republic, killing all eight on board.[22]
13 January 1946
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BANP) crashed at Le Bouscat, Bordeaux after striking a church steeple while operating a mail flight, killing both pilots.[23]
29 June 1946
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAJS) struck power lines and crashed near Pau while operating a mail flight, killing both pilots.[24]
8 August 1946
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAJT) was written off at Le Bourget Airport.[25]
3 September 1946
A Douglas DC-3A (F-BAOB) crashed in a field near Koge, Denmark due to an apparent in-flight fire, killing all 22 on board.[26]
4 September 1946
A Douglas DC-3D (F-BAXD) lost height on takeoff and crashed into a factory, killing 19 of 26 on board and one person on the ground. Air France's first flight attendant, Paulette Vavasseur, was among the dead.[27]
1 February 1947
A Douglas C-47A (F-BAXQ) struck Sierra de Sintra while on approach to Lisbon, killing 15 of 16 on board.[28]
5 March 1947
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAKP) was written off at Le Bourget Airport.[29]
14 March 1947
A Douglas C-47A (F-BAXO) struck Mont Moucherolle en route to Lyon from Nice, killing all 23 on board.[30]
4 June 1947
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BANB) crashed into high ground near Gemenos, France, killing the three crew.[31]
7 June 1947
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAKV) was written off at Yoff Airport, Senegal.[32]
1 July 1947
Air France Flight 612, an Amiot AAC.1 (F-BALF), crashed at Eseka, Cameroon en route to Douala from Yaounde, killing all 13 on board.[33]
4 October 1947
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAJB) was written off at Pau, France.[34]
7 October 1947
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATY) crashed at Bône, Algeria.[35]
6 January 1948
A Douglas DC-3D (F-BAXC) struck trees on final approach to Le Bourget Airport, killing all 16 on board.[36]
26 January 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BCUC) crashed into a furniture factory near Paris after an engine was shut down while on a training flight, killing all nine on board.[37]
4 February 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATK) was damaged beyond economical repair at Marignane Airport, Bouches-du-Rhône.[38]
10 February 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATH) was damaged beyond economical repair at Orly Airport, Paris.[39]
10 April 1948
A Douglas DC-4-1009 (F-BBDC) was being ferried when it crashed on takeoff from Kano, Algeria due to a locked nosewheel, killing one of six on board.[40]
14 June 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATG) crashed at Coulommiers - Voisins Aerodrome, Seine-et-Marne.[41]
1 August 1948
A Latécoère 631 flying boat (F-BDRC, named Lionel de Marnier) disappeared over the Atlantic Ocean with 52 on board.
29 August 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATO) crashed at Le Bourget Airport, Paris.[42]
23 November 1948
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATM) crashed on takeoff from Toulouse during a test flight due to reversed controls, killing one of five on board.[43]
9 April 1949
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATU) overran the runway at Nice Airport, Alpes-Maritimes and was damaged beyond economic repair.[44]
27 October 1949
Air France Flight 009, a Lockheed L-749-79-46 Constellation (F-BAZN), struck Redondo Mountain and crashed after two attempts to land at the São Miguel Island airport in the Azores, killing all 48 on board including boxer Marcel Cerdan, violinist Ginette Neveu, some members of the Barnum & Bailey Circus and Walt Disney Studios chief merchandiser Kay Kamen.[45][46]
28 November 1949
A Douglas C-54A (F-BELO) struck a tree on a small hill while on final approach to Lyon and crashed. The aircraft slid in open country and caught fire. Four crew and one passenger died of 38 on board.[47]

1950s

12 and 14 June 1950
Two Air France Douglas DC-4s (F-BBDF and F-BBDM, respectively) crashed into the sea off Bahrain while landing, with a combined loss of 86 lives. The first accident claimed the lives of 40 of the 53 occupants and the second 46 out of 52. Both aircraft had operated the Karachi, Pakistan, to Bahrain portion of Air France's Saigon, Indochina – Paris sector. The accident investigators concluded that the pilot in command did not maintain his correct altitude until the runway lights became visible during the approach to Bahrain in the first accident, and that the pilot in command did not keep an accurate check of his altitude and rate of descent during the approach procedure in the second accident.[48]
30 July 1950
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BCUI) was damaged beyond economic repair when its undercarriage collapsed on landing at Marignane Airport, Marseille; all 31 on board survived.[49]
3 February 1951
A Douglas DC-4-1009 (F-BBDO, named Ciel de Savoie) operating Air France's Douala, Cameroon, to Niamey, Niger, sector hit the 13,354 feet high Cameroon Mountain near Bouea, Cameroon, west of Douala, at a height of 8,500 feet (2,600 m). The aircraft was destroyed, killing all 29 occupants. The mountain was probably only partially visible from the flight deck due to the mist surrounding it. Although the pilot immediately turned to the left, the plane hit the steeply rising terrain with its left wing. The accident investigators concluded that the crew followed an inaccurate procedure and relied on imprecise navigation. The investigators furthermore determined that the crew did not check the draft [sic]. Moreover, they cited the crew's error of judgement and over-confidence when flying over the mountain mass as additional contributory factors.[50]
2 January 1952
An Amiot AAC.1 (F-BAMQ) crashed at Andapa, Madagascar, killing six of 11 on board.[51]
3 March 1952
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BCUM) operating a passenger flight from Nice Le Var Airport to Paris Le Bourget Airport crashed shortly after take-off with the loss of all 38 lives on board. Soon after takeoff from Le Var Airport, the aircraft began banking to the left. This increased progressively until the aircraft flipped over on its back and crashed. The accident investigators attributed the accident to the aircraft's blocked ailerons to the left, as a result of a mechanical fault related to the design.
7 April 1952
A SNCASE SE.161/P7 Languedoc (F-BATB) was damaged beyond economic repair when it overran the runway on take-off from Le Bourget Airport, Paris. All 23 on board survived; the aircraft was operating an international scheduled passenger flight from Le Bourget to Heathrow Airport, London.[52]
29 April 1952
A Douglas DC-4 (F-BELI) operating a German internal service from Frankfurt Rhein-Main Airport to Berlin Tempelhof Airport came under attack from two Soviet MiG 15 fighters while passing through one of the Allied air corridors over East Germany. Although the attack had severely damaged the aircraft, necessitating the shutdown of engines three and four, the pilot landed it safely at West Berlin's Tempelhof Airport, where an inspection revealed that it had been hit by 89 shots fired from the Soviet MiGs during the air attack. There were no fatalities among the 17 occupants (six crew, eleven passengers). The Soviet military authorities defended this attack on a civilian aircraft by claiming the DC-4 was outside the air corridor at the time of attack.[53]
3 August 1953
Air France Flight 152, a Lockheed L-749A Constellation (F-BAZS), ditched 6 miles from Fetiye Point, Turkey, 1.5 miles offshore into the Mediterranean Sea on a flight between Rome and Beirut. Violent vibrations following fracture of a propeller blade caused engine number three to break away, and control of engine number four was also lost. Vibrations continued with loss of altitude. The crew of eight and all but four of the 34 passengers were rescued.[54]
1 September 1953
Air France Flight 178, a Lockheed L-749A Constellation (F-BAZZ) operating the Paris-Nice portion of a passenger flight to Saigon crashed into Mount Cemet, France, with the loss of all 42 lives on board. The accident occurred while the flight deck crew was preparing to land at Nice's Côte d'Azur airport, the aircraft's first scheduled stop. The accident investigation established "controlled flight into terrain (CFIT)" as the cause.
3 August 1954
A Lockheed L-1049C Super Constellation (F-BGNA) flying from Orly Airport to Idlewild Airport force-landed in a field near Preston, Connecticut following fuel exhaustion. All 37 occupants survived.[55][56]
25 August 1954
A Lockheed L-749 Constellation (F-BAZI) was written off after it overran the runway at Gander Airport; all 67 passengers and crew on board survived.[57]
18 March 1955
A Douglas C-47A (F-BAXL) struck power lines and crashed on takeoff from Tille Airport, reportedly killing nine.[58]
28 January 1956
A Douglas C-47 (F-BCYK) struck telephone lines and crashed while on approach to Bron Airport during a mail flight, killing the three crew.[59]
12 December 1956
A Vickers Viscount 708 (F-BGNK) crashed near Dannemois, Île de France while on a training flight due to an unexplained loss of control, killing all five crew on board.[60]
8 April 1957
A Douglas C-47B (registration F-BEIK) operating an Algerian passenger flight from Biskra lost height after takeoff and crashed a mile beyond the airport's runway with the loss of all 32 lives on board, although a source put the death toll at 34.[61]
31 May 1958
A Douglas C-47A (registration F-BHKV) operating a military charter flight from Algiers to Colomb crashed near Molière with the loss of all 15 lives on board; a source put the death toll at 14.[62]
24 December 1958
Air France Flight 703, a Lockheed L-749A Constellation (F-BAZX) crashed short of the runway at Schwechat Airport; all 34 on board survived.[63]

1960s

29 August 1960
Air France Flight 343, a Lockheed L-1049G Super Constellation (F-BHBC) operating from Paris to Abidjan via Dakar, crashed into the sea with the loss of all 63 lives on board while the aircraft's crew made a second attempt to land at Dakar's Yoff Airport. The incident was blamed on a tropical wave that would become Hurricane Donna.[64]
10 May 1961
Air France Flight 406, a Lockheed L-1649A Starliner (F-BHBM) operating the Fort Lamy, Chad, to Marseille portion of Air France's Brazzaville – Paris flight crashed in the Sahara desert near Edjele, Algeria, with the loss of all 78 lives on board. The aircraft was cruising at an altitude of 20,000 feet (6,100 m) when its empennage failed. This caused it to break up in flight. The accident investigators believed that the empennage separated from the rest of the aircraft as a result of the detonation of a nitrocellulose explosive device.[65]
15 June 1961
A Boeing 707 en route from Paris to Lima caught fire while landing at Lisbon Portela de Sacavém as a result of a burst tyre. Although only three out of 109 passengers were slightly injured and most of the baggage, cargo and mail was salvaged, hundreds of chickens on their way to a farm in Central America did not survive the accident.[66]
27 July 1961
Air France Flight 272, a Boeing 707–328 (F-BHSA, named Chateau de Versailles) operating the polar route from Paris Orly via Hamburg and Anchorage to Tokyo Haneda veered to the left and ran off the runway at Hamburg Fuhlsbüttel, coming to rest 2,840 m from the starting point in depression containing a building site 140 m from the runway. The accident, which occurred while the aircraft was departing Fuhlsbüttel for Anchorage, severely damaged the aircraft, splitting the fuselage in two places ahead of the wings. As a result, ten of 41 occupants (four of 15 crew members and six of 26 passengers) sustained serious injuries.[67][68]
12 September 1961
Air France Flight 2005, a Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III (F-BJTB) operating a Paris Orly-Rabat-Casablanca service crashed near Rabat's airport with the loss of all 77 lives on board. At the time of the accident meteorological conditions in the local area were thick, low fog. The poor weather conditions reduced horizontal visibility and ceiling. The pilot informed ATC that he wanted to attempt a break-through over the NDB. The aircraft was destroyed by fire when it impacted the ground, killing everyone on board. The accident investigators cited the commander's error in reading his instruments as the most likely cause.[69]
3 June 1962
Air France Flight 007, a chartered Boeing 707–328 (registration F-BHSM), Chateau de Sully, flying from Orly Airport, Paris, France, to Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, crashed at Orly during takeoff. 130 out of 132 people on board were killed. Two flight attendants sitting in the rear section of the aircraft were saved. The investigation found a faulty servo motor, which had led to an improper (and non-adjustable) elevator trim. Brake marks measuring 1,500 feet (457 m) were found on the runway, indicating that the flight deck crew tried to abort takeoff. The aircraft rolled right while only seven feet (two m) from the ground, causing its right wing to hit the ground. It crashed 50 yards (45 m) from the runway and exploded.[70] Of the passengers 106 were Atlanta art patrons who had finished a tour of European capitals. Ann Uhry Abrams, the author of Explosion at Orly: The True Account of the Disaster that Transformed Atlanta, described the incident as "Atlanta’s version of Sept. 11 in that the impact on the city in 1962 was comparable to New York of Sept. 11." This was the deadliest crash in Air France history until the crash of Air France Flight 447.[71]
22 June 1962
Air France Flight 117, operated with a Boeing 707–328 (F-BHST), crashed into a forest on a hill at an altitude of about 4,000 feet (1,200 m) during bad weather, while attempting to land at Pointe-à-Pitre in Guadeloupe, killing all 113 on board. The aircraft was attempting a non-precision NDB approach. A malfunctioning VOR station and poor NDB reception due to thunderstorms were blamed for the accident. The airframe had accumulated only 985 hours of flying at the time of the accident.[72] After that crash Air France pilots criticized under-developed airports with facilities that were ill-equipped to handle jet aircraft, such as Guadeloupe's airport.[73]
5 March 1968
Air France Flight 212, a Boeing 707-328C (F-BLCJ) operating a Caracas-Point-à-Pitre service hit the southern slope of La Soufrière Mountain at an altitude of 3,937 feet, 27.5 km SSW of Le Raizet Airport with the loss of all 63 lives on board. When ATC had cleared the flight deck crew for a visual approach to Le Raizet's runway 11, the crew had reported the airfield in sight. Flight 212 started to descend from FL90 and passed Saint Claude at an altitude of about 4,400 feet (1,300 m). The accident investigators cited the probable cause as a visual approach procedure at night in which the descent was begun from an incorrectly identified point. Charlie Juliet had flown for 33 hours since coming off the Boeing production line, and was on her second revenue service (her maiden passenger flight was the previous day's outbound journey from Paris).[74]
11 September 1968
Air France Flight 1611, a Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III (F-BOHB) operating a Ajaccio, Corsica – Nice service, crashed into the sea near Cap d'Antibes off Nice with the loss of all 95 lives on board. The accident occurred while the flight deck crew attempted an emergency landing at Côte d'Azur Airport, following the detection of a fire in the aircraft's rear cabin 21 minutes after takeoff from Ajaccio. The accident investigators believed that the fire had started in the right lavatory and galley area. In 2011, a former French Army soldier alleged that he saw a report that a missile shot down the aircraft.[75]
3 December 1969
Air France Flight 212, a Boeing 707-328B (F-BHSZ) operating a Caracas-Point-à-Pitre service crashed into the sea shortly after takeoff from Simon Bolivar International Airport with the loss of all 62 on board.[76]

1970s

12 June 1975
Air France Flight 193, a Boeing 747–128 (N28888) operating the sector between Bombay (now Mumbai), and Tel Aviv to Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport was destroyed by fire on the ground at Bombay's Santa Cruz Airport, following an aborted takeoff. The aircraft's tire on its right-hand main undercarriage had failed while the flight deck crew was executing a 180 degree turn at the beginning of Santa Cruz Airport's runway 27. When the flight deck crew began its takeoff run, another tire failed. At that point the plane's wheels and braking assembly came into contact with the runway, starting a fire. The crew aborted takeoff. The ensuing delay in shutting down the engines, as well as the improper deployment of the airport's fire service, caused the fire to spread, leading to the plane's total destruction. There were no fatalities among the 394 occupants (18 crew and 376 passengers).[77]
Operation Entebbe
On 27 June 1976, an Airbus A300 (registration F-BVGG) operating as Flight 139 from Tel Aviv to Paris via Athens was hijacked shortly after departing Athens. After refuelling in Benghazi, Libya, the hijackers demanded it be flown to Entebbe, Uganda. One hostage was freed in Benghazi and in Uganda another 155 non-Israeli and/or non-Jewish hostages were released. The flight crew remained with the hostages after Captain Bacos insisted he was responsible for them. After several days of negotiating and diplomatic interventions, Israel launched a commando raid into Entebbe to free them. During the assault all six of the hijackers were killed as were three hostages. The leader of the assault, Yoni Netanyahu, was also killed. One hostage, 75-year-old Dora Bloch, was unaccounted for. She had been taken to Mulago Hospital prior to the assault and later killed on Idi Amin's orders.
14 June 1979
Air France Flight 54, a Concorde suffered a tire burst on take off en route to Paris. Two tires burst, with the subsequent shrapnel piercing the wing, which consequently began to leak fuel. The crew did not notice this until a Passenger alerted the cabin crew to a hole in the wing. When noticing this the crew immediately reduced thrust and landed at Dulles Airport for a closer inspection. A similar issue led to Air France Flight 4590 20 years later, which had a fatality of 113 people (100 Passengers, 9 crew and 4 people on the ground).

1980s

18 January 1984
Air France Flight 171, a Boeing 747, suffered an explosion in the cargo hold en route from Karachi, Pakistan, to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, shortly after departing Karachi blew a hole in the right rear cargo hold. The resulting loss of cabin pressure necessitated an immediate descent to 5,000 feet (1,500 m). The aircraft returned to Karachi without any fatalities among the 261 occupants (15 crew and 246 passengers).[78]
2 December 1985
Air France Flight 091, a Boeing 747-228B (F-GCBC), veered off the runway on landing at the Rio de Janeiro-Galeão International Airport, crossed a ditch and collided with a concrete ramp. There were no fatalities or injuries among the 250 passengers and 23 crew. The aircraft was scrapped.
26 June 1988
Air France Flight 296, Airbus A320-111 (F-GFKC) crashed near Mulhouse-Habsheim Airport, in the French region of Alsace. The accident occurred during an airshow while the flight deck crew was performing a flypast at low height and speed. The aircraft overflew the airfield in good weather. Seconds later the aircraft struck treetops behind the runway and crashed into a forest, as a result of flying too low and too slowly. Three passengers died and about 50 were injured.[79]

1990s

12 September 1993
Air France Flight 072, a Boeing 747-428B registered F-GITA skidded out of runway 22 at Tahiti Faa'a International Airport – Papeete, French Polynesia. No fatalities reported.
24 December 1994
Air France Flight 8969, an Airbus A300B2-1C (registration F-GBEC) was hijacked at Houari Boumedienne Airport in Algiers, by four terrorists who belonged to the Armed Islamic Group. The terrorists apparently intended to crash the plane over the Eiffel Tower on Boxing Day. After a failed attempt to leave Marseille following a confrontational firefight between the terrorists and the GIGN French Special Forces, the result was the death of all four terrorists. (Snipers on the terminal front's roof shot dead two of the terrorists. The other two terrorists died as a result of gunshots in the cabin after approximately 20 minutes.) Three hostages including a Vietnamese diplomat were executed, 229 hostages survived, many of them wounded by shrapnel. The almost 15-year-old aircraft was written off.[80]
5 September 1996
During Air France Flight 437 turbulence caused injuries to thirty people on a Boeing 747 in mid-air, going from Johannesburg to Paris. One passenger died later from injuries received from an in-flight film projection screen.[81][82]
20 April 1998
Air France Flight 422: the Air France flight from Bogotá's El Dorado Airport, to Quito, using an aircraft wet-leased from TAME, crashed into a mountain near Bogotá. All 43 passengers and 10 crew died.[83][84] Although not an Air France plane, the flight was the final segment of an Air France flight originating in Paris.
5 March 1999
Air France Flight 6745, an ex-UTA Boeing 747-2B3F (SCD) freighter (registration F-GPAN) carrying a revenue load of 66 tons of cargo from Paris Charles de Gaulle to Madras, (now Chennai) India crash-landed, caught fire and burned out. Madras ATC had cleared the aircraft for an ILS approach to the airport's runway 07. The crew abandoned the approach due to technical difficulties. The aircraft circled to attempt a second approach and at the end of the second approach, the aircraft's nose struck the runway while touching down because its nose gear was either not down or not locked. The plane skidded and came to rest 7,000 feet (2,100 m) down the 13,050 foot runway. After it had come to a standstill, the crew noticed smoke on the flight deck and began to extinguish the flames. Soon after, flames erupted in the aircraft's front section. One crew member managed to escape from the flight deck via a rope ladder. The remaining four crew members were rescued by the airport fire service from the rear, before the flames engulfed the entire aircraft. The fire service was unable to extinguish the fire and the aircraft burned out.[85][86]

2000s

25 July 2000
Air France Flight 4590, a chartered Concorde (F-BTSC) departing from De Gaulle airport in Paris bound for New York's JFK Airport crashed into a hotel in Gonesse, France, just after takeoff. All 109 people on board died along with four people on the ground. According to the accident investigation report, the probable cause was the destruction of one of the aircraft's main wheel tires, as a result of passing at high speed over a part lost by a pre-departing Continental Airlines DC-10 during the takeoff run. The piercing of one of the fuel tanks by a piece of the exploding tire ignited the leaking jet fuel and caused a loss of thrust in engine number one and two in quick succession.[87]
2 August 2005
Air France Flight 358, an Airbus A340-300 (registration F-GLZQ) overshot the runway at Toronto Pearson International Airport during a thunderstorm. The plane continued for 300 metres before coming to rest at the bottom of a ravine at the end of the runway adjacent to Highway 401. All 297 passengers and 12 crew survived but the plane was completely destroyed by fire. The investigation predominately blamed pilot error when faced with the severe weather conditions.
1 June 2009
Air France Flight 447, an Airbus A330-203 (registration F-GZCP) from Rio de Janeiro to Paris with 228 people on board lost contact with air traffic control while over the Atlantic Ocean, 300 km (190 mi) north-east of the Brazilian city of Natal.[88] In the days following the crash only portions of the plane and 51 bodies were found. All passengers and crew members were killed in the crash. It took just under two years to find the black boxes. The BEA's final report stated that the probable cause of the crash was the aircraft's pitot tubes icing over leading the autopilot to disconnect and handing full control of the aircraft to the pilots. The pilots were confused by various warnings and messages from the aircraft's on board systems and pulled the nose of the plane up to the point where the aircraft stalled. The pilots failed to recognise that the aircraft had stalled until it was too late to prevent an uncontrolled and rapid descent into the Atlantic Ocean..[89]

Hijackings

Air France has been the target of several hijackings, which are listed in chronological order:

References

  1. Accident description for F-AMMY at the Aviation Safety Network
  2. "Mishap to French Air Liner" The Times (London). Monday, 21 May 1934. (46759), col F, p. 7.
  3. Accident description for F-AOTZ at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2015-06-04.
  4. Accident description for F-ANPB at the Aviation Safety Network
  5. Accident description for F-ANQR at the Aviation Safety Network
  6. Accident description for F-ANPJ at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2015-06-04.
  7. Accident description for F-ARIC at the Aviation Safety Network
  8. Accident description for F-AOHA at the Aviation Safety Network
  9. Accident description for F-ARTD at the Aviation Safety Network
  10. Harro Ranter (7 July 1940). "ASN Aircraft accident Dewoitine D-338 F-AQBA Gulf of Tonkin". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  11. Accident description for F-AQBJ at the Aviation Safety Network
  12. Criminal description for F-AROA at the Aviation Safety Network
  13. Accident description for F-AQNL at the Aviation Safety Network
  14. Criminal description for F-AREJ at the Aviation Safety Network
  15. Accident description for F-ARIZ at the Aviation Safety Network
  16. Accident description for F-ARRF at the Aviation Safety Network
  17. Accident description for F-BAJP at the Aviation Safety Network
  18. Accident description for F-BANT at the Aviation Safety Network
  19. Accident description for F-BALV at the Aviation Safety Network
  20. Accident description for F-BANP at the Aviation Safety Network
  21. Accident description for F-BAJS at the Aviation Safety Network
  22. Accident description for F-BAJT at the Aviation Safety Network
  23. Accident description for F-BAOB at the Aviation Safety Network
  24. Accident description for F-BAXD at the Aviation Safety Network
  25. Accident description for F-BAXQ at the Aviation Safety Network
  26. Accident description for F-BAKP at the Aviation Safety Network
  27. Accident description for F-BAXO at the Aviation Safety Network
  28. Accident description for F-BANB at the Aviation Safety Network
  29. Accident description for F-BAKV at the Aviation Safety Network
  30. Accident description for F-BALF at the Aviation Safety Network
  31. Accident description for F-BAJB at the Aviation Safety Network
  32. Accident description for F-BATY at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  33. Accident description for F-BAXC at the Aviation Safety Network
  34. Accident description for F-BCUC at the Aviation Safety Network
  35. Accident description for F-BATK at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  36. Accident description for F-BATH at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  37. Accident description for F-BBDC at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 3 June 2015.
  38. Accident description for F-BATG at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  39. Accident description for F-BATO at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  40. Accident description for F-BATM at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 3 June 2015.
  41. Accident description for F-BATU at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  42. Gabler, Neal, Walt Disney, 2007, p.472
  43. "Milestones, Nov. 7, 1949". Time. 7 November 1949. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  44. Accident description for F-BELO at the Aviation Safety Network
  45. "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 06121950". airdisaster.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  46. Accident description for F-BCUI at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 5 June 2015.
  47. Accident description for F-BBDO at the Aviation Safety Network
  48. Accident description for F-BAMQ at the Aviation Safety Network
  49. Accident description for F-BATB at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 27 February 2014.
  50. Criminal description for F-BELI at the Aviation Safety Network
  51. Accident description for F-BAZS at the Aviation Safety Network
  52. Kihiss, Peter. "All 37 on Paris Airliner Safe In Fiery Connecticut Crash; Passengers and Crew Escape Death in Crash Landing of Big Air France Transport." The New York Times. 4 August 1954. Page 1. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.
  53. Accident description for F-BGNA at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.
  54. Accident description for F-BAZI at the Aviation Safety Network
  55. Accident description for F-BAXL at the Aviation Safety Network
  56. Accident description for F-BCYK at the Aviation Safety Network
  57. Accident description for F-BGNK at the Aviation Safety Network
  58. Accident description for F-BEIK at the Aviation Safety Network
  59. Accident description for F-BHKV at the Aviation Safety Network
  60. Accident description for F-BAZX at the Aviation Safety Network
  61. Harro Ranter (29 August 1960). "ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-1049G Super Constellation F-BHBC Dakar-Yoff Airport (DKR)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  62. Harro Ranter (10 May 1961). "ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-1649A Starliner F-BHBM Edjele". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  63. "1961 - 0870 - Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  64. Harro Ranter (27 July 1961). "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 707-328 F-BHSA Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel Airport (HAM)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  65. "1961 - 1068 - Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  66. Harro Ranter (12 September 1961). "ASN Aircraft accident Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III F-BJTB Rabat-Sale Airport (RBA)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  67. "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 06031962". airdisaster.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  68. Morris, Mike. "Air France crash recalls ‘62 Orly tragedy." Atlanta Journal Constitution. Tuesday 2 June 2009. Retrieved on 2 June 2009.
  69. "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 06221962". airdisaster.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  70. "Boeing Crash Pilot's Alleged Protest Before Flight." The Times. Monday July 2, 1962. 10.
  71. Harro Ranter (11 September 1968). "ASN Aircraft accident Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III F-BOHB Nice, France". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  72. Harro Ranter (12 June 1975). "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 747-128 N28888 Mumbai (Bombay)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  73. Harro Ranter (18 January 1984). "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 747 registration unknown Karachi". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  74. Harro Ranter (26 June 1988). "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A320-111 F-GFKC Mulhouse-Habsheim Airport". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  75. Harro Ranter (26 December 1994). "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A300B2-1C F-GBEC Marseille-Marignane Airport (MRS)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  76. Final BEA Report (HTML) (French)
  77. "Final BEA Report." (PDF – Archive)
  78. "Air France plane crashes since 1970". airsafe.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  79. "Accident Database: Accident Synopsis 04201998". airdisaster.com. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  80. Harro Ranter (5 March 1999). "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 747-2B3F (SCD) F-GPAN Chennai Airport (MAA)". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  81. "BBC News - WORLD - Boeing's workhorse". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  82. Harro Ranter (25 July 2000). "ASN Aircraft accident Aérospatiale / BAC Concorde 101 F-BTSC Gonesse". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  83. "French plane 'missing' off Brazil". BBC News Online. 2009-06-01. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  84. Clark, Nicola (29 July 2011). "Report on Air France Crash Points to Pilot Training". The New York Times.
  85. 1 2 Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  86. Smith, Terence (4 July 1976). "HOSTAGES FREED AS ISRAELIS RAID UGANDA AIRPORT; Commandos in 3 Planes Rescue 105-Casualties Unknown Israelis Raid Uganda Airport And Free Hijackers' Hostages". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  87. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  88. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  89. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  90. Institut National de l’Audiovisuel – Ina.fr. "Fin détournement Boeing". Ina.fr. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  91. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  92. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  93. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  94. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  95. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  96. Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.