Brazil Hands Black Box Data From Crashed Plane
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - The extraction of flight data from the Brazilian-made Azerbaijan Airlines plane that crashed in Kazakhstan last month was completed at a lab run by Brazil's air force, according to a statement released by the entity on Monday. The data from the Embraer plane was sent to the Kazakhstan authority investigating the crash.
Brazil’s air force says several of its investigators are working with colleagues from three other nations to analyze data from the Azerbaijani airliner that crashed in Kazakhstan on Dec. 25, killing 38 people.
Flight records for the plane made by Brazil's Embraer that crashed last week in Kazakhstan are headed to the South American country so the data can be extracted, the Brazilian Air Force said in a statement on Monday.
Azerbaijan’s leader on Monday accused Moscow of carrying out a “cover up” over a passenger jet crash last month that claimed 38 lives, as relations sour between the two neighbors.
The flight recorders of the Azerbaijan Airlines aircraft that crashed at the airport in Aktau, Kazakhstan, will be sent to Brazil for decoding. Source: Ministry of Transport of the Republic of Kazakhstan on Telegram Quote: "According to the standards of Annex 13 of the Chicago Convention,
Azerbaijani, Russia, Kazakhstan and Brazil are currently working together to investigate a horrific recent plane crash.
Flight records for the plane made by Brazil's Embraer that crashed last week in Kazakhstan are headed to the South American country so the data can be extracted, the Brazilian Air Force has said in a statement.
The flight recorders were analysed in Brazil, but Kazakhstan is in charge of releasing the results. Read more at straitstimes.com.