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Investigators Blame Pilots, Airline For Bellview, ADC crashes
The Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) on Saturday officially released to the public over 20 aircraft accident reports.

The reports, posted on the AIB website (www.aib.gov.ng) include the
October 22, 2005 mishap of Bellview Airlines Flight 210 in Lisa, Ogun
State, which killed all 117 passengers on board.
The reports also included those involving Sosoliso in Port-Harcourt
airport in 2005 where over a hundred school children of the prestigious
Loyola Jesuit College and a popular preacher, Bimbo Odukoya met their
death.
For the Sosoliso crash, the weather reports obtained from the
Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET), and the one compiled from the
satellite imagery by the Boeing aircraft company (USA), showed that
there was a change in the wind speed and direction when the aircraft was
approaching the station.
Other reports are AIB interim report on Beechcraft 1900D accident at
Bushi village in Obanlinku local government of Cross River State on
march 15, 2008, report on the accident to Boeing 737 aircraft registered
5N-AUA that crashed at the new Kaduna airport on November 13, 1995, the
2008 Nigeria police force’s Bell 412 helicopter and the September 7th
accident involving DHL, registration ZS-DPF, at Murtala Muhammed
international airport, Ikeja, Lagos and on the accident involving
Tampico club 9 aircraft, reg. 5N-CBF at Zaria, Kaduna state on October
10, 2006, among others.
The AIB had concluded its investigations on the air calamities and
came up with the reports, but successive Ministers of Aviation had
failed to make the reports public.
The AIB, based at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, carried
out the investigations in accordance with Annex 13 to the Convention on
International Civil Aviation, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Act 2006, and
Civil Aviation (Investigation of Air Accidents and Incidents)
Regulations.
Hence, it stated that in accordance with Annex 13 to the Convention
on International Civil Aviation, it is not the purpose of aircraft
accident/serious incident investigations to apportion blame or
liability.
It advised readers that the AIB investigates for the sole purpose of
enhancing aviation safety, and consequently, “its reports are confined
to matters of safety significance and should not be used for any other
purpose.”
It added that, “recommendations in this report are addressed to the
regulatory Authorities of the state (NCAA),” and “it is for this
authority to decide what action is taken.”
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