Kazakh plane crash: Black boxes sent to Brazil for analysis
The black boxes from the crashed AZAL plane will be sent to the Brazilian Center for Investigation and Prevention of Aeronautical Accidents (CENIPA), as informed by the press service of the Ministry of Transport of Kazakhstan, quoted by the pro-Kremlin agency RIA Novosti.
Many pieces of information provided by Russian media or government representatives are part of propaganda. Such reports are a component of the information war conducted by the Russian Federation.
The black boxes from the AZAL plane crash will be handed over to the Center for Investigation and Prevention of Aeronautical Accidents in Brazil (CENIPA). This decision was made by the investigation commission led by the Minister of Transport of Kazakhstan, Marat Karabayev. According to the communication from the Kazakh Ministry of Transport, the Embraer aircraft was manufactured in Brazil.
Under the standards of Annex 13 to the Chicago Convention, the state conducting the investigation handles the reading of black box records and decides which country will analyze them. Kazakhstan ratified this convention in 1992 and is a member of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).
The Kazakh Ministry of Transport emphasized that the decision was based on the mentioned document and ICAO recommendations, as well as consultations with the aviation authorities of Azerbaijan and Russia. The CENIPA Center has the necessary technical capabilities, equipment, and a certified laboratory for data reading.
Plane crash in Kazakhstan
An Embraer 190 plane from Azerbaijan Airlines, flying from Baku to Grozny, crashed on December 25 near the city of Aktau in western Kazakhstan. There were 62 passengers and five crew members on board. Twenty-nine people survived the crash, including nine Russians.
The Minister of Digital Development and Transport of Azerbaijan, Rashad Nabiyev, stated that the Azerbaijan Airlines plane fell victim to external interference. Passengers and surviving crew members reported hearing the sound of an explosion while flying over Grozny.
The head of Rosaviatsia, Dmitry Yadrov, informed that at the time of the crash, a Ukrainian drone attack was underway over the areas of Grozny and Vladikavkaz, which led to the introduction of the "Kover" alert in the Grozny airport area, ordering all planes to immediately leave the airspace. The plane was hit by a missile from Russian air defence.
Azerbaijan sets conditions
The President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, demands compensation from Russia and punishment for those responsible for the Embraer-190 flight crash. Aliyev emphasizes that Russia should take responsibility for the incident.
Vladimir Putin spoke with Aliyev twice, although Moscow has not officially confirmed the use of a Russian missile.
Source: RIA Novosti, WP News