Mangalore crash report: UK firm backs India's approach to airport safety

[email protected] (cisionwire.com)
July 5, 2012

safty

London, July 5: UK fibreglass mast manufacturer Pollite has reminded airports globally of the importance of installing thoroughly tested frangible ground handling infrastructure, in light of new recommendations released to Air India.

Recommendations from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, Airports Authority of India and the Ministry of Civil Aviation pertaining to the Mangalore Air Crash which claimed 158 lives in May 2010, asks airports in India to become more compliant with the requirement of frangibly-mounted structures, citing Calicut and Mangalore airport antennae supporting structures as examples.

The recommendations come in light of new figures that show 40% of occasions where air craft suffered overrun upon take off, ended in fatalities, backing up research from the CAA Safety Regulation Group that found there were 32 major accidents worldwide between 1996 and 2006, which resulted in 623 fatalities.

The importance of having frangible-mounted structures within airports is an issue that will never go away. Calicut and Mangalore airports have both installed frangible airport antennae that break upon impact, dramatically reducing the risk of fatalities upon runway take off errors. As one of just three approach mast manufacturers globally that are certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Pollite understands more than most how crucial it is for ground handling equipment to break on impact in light of an aircraft take-off failure.

The FAA is strict on such matters, requiring airport infrastructure to go through a series of rigorous frangibility tasks, including solar radiation and salt spray testing. It is important for approach poles to be weather-proof and not vulnerable to the natural environment. Resistance to animals, wear and tear, extremes of temperature and magnetic interference are all important factors to consider to ensure that approach poles only break when you need them to – upon impact.

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News Network
May 28,2020

Mangaluru, May 28: As many as 19 labourers, who were stranded in Lakshadweep island due to lockdown following COVID-19 outbreak, have been brought back to Mangaluru by a boat ' Amindivi' on Thursday.

On their arrival, they were subjected to medical examination and were warmly welcomed by their family members who had come to receive them at the Port.

 

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News Network
June 25,2020

Bengaluru, Jun 25: State-run Kumara Krupa Guest House in the city will be used as 100-bed COVID-19 treatment center for the designated category patients, Karnataka Health Department Sources said here on Thursday.

According to official sources, one wing of the Guest House with 100-bed rooms of individual occupancy having all the facilities is reserved to work as Covid Care Center (CCC) and it will be used for Ministers, MPs, MLAs/MLCs, Senior officers of above Secretary rank for clinical management.

The total number of positive cases reported till date in the State has increased to 10,118, the sources added.

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News Network
May 16,2020

Kalaburagi, May 16: Former Karnataka Minister Dr Sharanprakash Patil, who was booked for violating COVID-19 imposed lockdown guidelines said on Friday that it was "politically motivated".

"It's politically motivated, the officer who filed the case was forced by MLA or some other people. As elected representatives, we're going in the constituencies, listening to people as they're apprehensive about the return of migrants. We had not conducted any meeting. Wherever we have gone we have followed social distancing," Patil said.

Patil said, "When I had gone there people came to discuss about a local problem and I was talking to an official concerned. In the meantime, some officer gave a complaint that we have violated the lockdown or something."

"They are trying to curb the voice of opposition because there are a lot of lacunae. We hear complaints about quarantine centres that there is no proper facility for food, or stay, or bathrooms," the Congress leader said.

The FIR was registered on Thursday against 23 persons, including the former MLA and 21 local Congress leaders, under Section 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by a public servant) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

Congress leader Patil and his followers had conducted a meeting at a convention hall in Sulpeth town on May 13, following which sectoral magistrate Muneer Ahmed lodged a complaint.

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