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There Were No Shots Prior To A320 Crash

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  • There Were No Shots Prior To A320 Crash

    THERE WERE NO SHOTS PRIOR TO A320 CRASH
    Mikhael Baghdasarov Says

    AZG Armenian Daily
    18/05/2006

    The owner of Armavia carrier whose plane had plunged into the Black
    Sea on May 3 morning killing all 113 people aboard, told journalists
    yesterday that the flight recorders of the A-320 airliner would be
    given, if recovered, to French Airbus company's experts who are also
    involved in the crash investigation.

    Mikhael Baghdasarov, a Russia-based Armenian businessman, who owns
    the biggest air company, said flight recorders have to be decoded
    which only Airbus' experts can do, since only the company has the
    special clue. He said the company has no information about exactly
    when the flight recorders could be retrieved from the depth of about
    495 meters. Baghdasarov then described rumors that the wrecked A320
    carried huge sums of money, that there were shots before it fell into
    the sea and that the pilot might have died of a heart stroke or a
    shot as 'nonsense."

    He said if part of these rumors were true the captain would have
    reported it to ground controllers, while the recording of their
    conversation has no indication of it. He likewise dismissed lack of
    fuel or unprofessional crew as a likely cause of the accident.

    Meantime Russian emergency officials said they continued efforts to
    recover the flight recorders of the Armenian airliner throughout the
    night and early morning today. The Armenian aircraft had fallen into
    the Black sea near Russian resort town of Sochi on May 3 killing all
    105 passengers and eight crew members.

    Russian officials said rescuers worked in three shifts each eight
    hour-long. The strong side wind that impeded the operation subsided
    at about midnight to Wednesday, they said. The deep-water robotic
    device sank to the seabed between 01:00 till 06:00 am on Wednesday to
    search for the airliner recorders. Silt on the bottom complicates the
    work. The video camera and the searchlights get dirty, and the team
    has to raise the robotic device to clean them. Its sinking takes 40
    minutes, and it takes the same time to raise it.

    The search groups had a break in the work for some time on Wednesday
    morning. If the weather does not worsen, the search will continue,
    they said. The device is capable of lifting fragments of the plane
    weighing up to 12 kilograms, while the two flight recorders each weighs
    seven kilograms. According to reports, the flight recorders are at the
    depth of 496 meters. The distance between them is about five meters.
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