Page 4 of 16

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 1:40 pm
by Sprocky
Conflicting stories emerging now.

The Pilot and Flight Engineer were from 15 Squadron in Durban and the three soldiers were from 5 Special Forces Regiment in Phalaborwa.

It was mentioned somewhere else that they had no part in apprehending a suspected rhino poacher. They took off from Olifants with the "nightsun" light switched on. After circling the camp they set heading for Skukuza and turned off the nightsun light. This transition from very bright light to total darkness could have affected their night vision causing the pilot to become disorientated and fly into the ground.

According to SOP's they should have waited until the moon was above the horizon before taking off.

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 1:43 pm
by Mel
What a loss for their families and for the Operation Rhino...
Such young guys as well. :-(

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 2:50 pm
by Flutterby
Very sad!! :-(

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 7:27 pm
by Toko
SANDF to probe KNP air crash

01 April | 13:30

By DAILY NEWS REPORTERS

Durban - The SA Defence Force is investigating its third military aircraft accident in four months after a helicopter crashed in the Kruger National Park on Saturday night, killing all five soldiers on board.

It is the fourth of the SA Air force’s Italian-made Agusta A109 light utility helicopter – procured as part of the government’s strategic defence package – to crash in SA since 2009.

There are also conflicting statements as to why the Agusta A109 was flying over the park.

According to the military, it was on a scheduled aerial patrol as part of Operation Rhino, an anti-rhino poaching initiative, when it crashed at approximately at 7pm.

However, SA National Parks spokesman Ike Phaahla said on Sunday the soldiers were not part of the rhino anti-poaching unit, but were travelling to their base near the park.

Phaahla referred all further media enquiries to the SANDF.

All spokesman Brigadier-General Xolani Mabanga would say was that an investigation was under way.

Mabanga was adamant that the five soldiers were part of the anti-poaching operation. “They were in the Kruger as part of Operation Rhino.

“We therefore find statements by Sanparks to be irresponsible and frankly, we don’t take kindly to that,” he said.

The names of the deceased were expected to be released on Monday.

In December 2010, an A109 crashed near Ballito.

At the time, as a precautionary measure, the Directorate of Helicopter Systems, responsible for operational control, ordered that all Agusta 109s around the country stop flying until the all-clear was given that the accident had not been caused by a mechanical failure.

A passenger on board the helicopter suffered a broken back and pelvis, but the pilot and flight engineer did not sustain any serious injuries.

The aircraft was seriously damaged, with the tail almost separated by the main rotor on landing.

Three weeks before that, another A109 was involved in a hard landing near Potchefstroom, causing severe damage.

And in May 2009, an A109 en-route to a mountain flying exercise crashed into the Woodstock Dam, killing its three crew members.

More recently, an SANDF C-47 Dakota aircraft carrying a crew of six and five passengers crashed at Giants Castle in the Drakensberg on December 5 last year, killing all 11 on board, the military confirmed.

On November 7, another Dakota C-47 was damaged when it experienced a hard landing at Umtata airport.

Commenting on Sunday on the latest crash, President Jacob Zuma expressed his condolences to the soldiers’ families. “We certainly hope that investigations will shed light on the circumstances of the crash but the whole country is saddened by the loss of our national servicemen on duty,” he said.

The tragedy occurred in the week that South Africans were mourning the death of 13 SANDF soldiers in the Central African Republic.

Mabanga said the names of the crash victims could not be released until it was confirmed that all family members had been notified.

The SA National Defence Union said the deaths represented “one of the blackest weeks in SA military history”, and called on the SANDF to commission a board of inquiry into the accident.

“SA soldiers are at the forefront of fighting the scourge of rhino poaching in our country and are doing an excellent job for which they place their lives in mortal danger daily,” the union’s national secretary, Pikkie Greeff, said in a statement.

“Let us respect and admire the services and sacrifices of our SANDF members to our country.

“May their souls rest in peace and their sacrifice never be forgotten.”

The SAPS had passed their condolences via Twitter, saying: “Their commitment to protect our heritage will never be forgotten.”

Rhino poaching is rampant in SA and the horns are often sold in Asia, where some believe they have medicinal purposes, although there is no evidence to support it.

So far this year, 188 rhinos have been poached in South Africa, 135 in Kruger alone, according to government figures released this week.

In 2012, 668 rhinos were poached in South Africa, a 50 percent rise on the previous year and double the number killed illegally in 2010.

Last year 424 rhinos were killed in the Kruger National Park, up from 252 in 2011 and 146 the year before that.

The Kruger National Park led the rhino slaughter statistics compared with the rest of the country.

Daily News

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 7:33 pm
by Richprins
Kruger helicopter crash victims named
2013-04-01 15:29


"It is with sadness that the SANDF announces the names of the members who were in a fatal helicopter crash," the department of defence said in a statement.

The soldiers were: Captain Jacobus Andries van Rensburg; Captain MP Chabalala; Sergeant Paulus Shongela Ndishishi; Sergeant GP Ruiters and Lance Corporal Bheki Petros Cele.

On Saturday night, a helicopter conducting a scheduled aerial patrol of the Kruger National Park - as part of an anti-rhino poaching operation - crashed, killing the five SANDF members on board.

The SANDF said a preliminary investigation was currently underway to establish the sequence of events that led to the crash.

Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, Chief of the SANDF, General Solly Shoke, and Chief of the SA Air Force, Lieutenant General Zimpande Msimang expressed their heartfelt condolences to the families and friends of the soldiers.

- SAPA


http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/ ... d-20130401

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 7:57 pm
by iNdlovu
So now it seems that Sanparks & the SANDF are not too happy with each other. I get the distinct impression that when SanParks make statements to the media they shoot their mouths off with no prior thought or uniformity. 0*\

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2013 8:08 pm
by Richprins
Better let the investigation take its course? -O-

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2013 5:39 pm
by Richprins

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Fri Apr 05, 2013 4:23 pm
by Sprocky
We have just had a friend over at our house, the widow of our friend that was killed in the chopper accident. :-(

It is shocking to hear how slack the military has become, even Special Forces, a unit that I was a proud member of for 4 years. When I hear what I heard today, I am not at all surprised that military intervention is not really having much success in the war against Rhino poaching. O/

J-Lee and I will be attending Jakes' funeral on Tuesday. :-(

Re: Chopper down in KNP

Posted: Fri Apr 05, 2013 6:20 pm
by Penga Ndlovu
So sorry to hear that bud. Condolences.

Nope people who can fly, fight or sail anymore.
This is bad.
And all because are filling there pockets. O/