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Why fly during typhoon, angry families ask after Taiwan crash

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Angry relatives of the passengers who were on TransAsia Airways flight GE222 are now questioning why the plane was cleared to fly in bad weather.

The Taiwanese aircraft crashed in torrential rain in the Penghu island chain on Wednesday, killing 48 people.

Rescuers said on Thursday they had recovered black boxes from the aircraft, raising hopes of an answer to what caused the domestic flight to crash with just 10 survivors.

A man with the surname Hsu, whose 28-year-old son was killed in the crash, told AFP outside a funeral home in Penghu: "The airline should not let the plane take off in such bad weather."

The daughter of pilot Lee Yi-liang, who was also killed, told FTV cable news channel​: "The weather was so terrible and Taiwan was still under the typhoon’s influence, (the plane) shouldn’t have taken off."

Met aviation safety requirements

But Taiwanese officials defended the decision to allow the flight to go ahead.  

“Many people were questioning why the plane took off in typhoon weather... according to my understanding the meteorology data showed that it met the aviation safety requirements,” T​ransport Minister Yeh Kuang-shih told reporters.  

Two planes had landed safely at Magong airport shortly before the disaster, officials said.

The ATR 72-500 propeller plane was carrying 54 passengers and four crew members when it plunged into eight houses in Magong on its way from Kaohsiung in southwestern Taiwan, injuring five people on the ground, officials said.

Two French medical students were among the dead, the foreign ministry in Paris said.  

Flight GE222 was trying to land for the second time after aborting the first attempt during thunder and heavy rain as Typhoon Matmo pounded Taiwan.

Investigators are looking into the cause of the crash, including why the plane was cleared to fly in bad weather.

Appease the spirits

More than 100 rescuers, including firefighters and soldiers, worked to remove bodies and scattered debris from the site on Thursday with a crane brought in to lift the plane wreckage.

A religious ceremony was held at the crash site to appease the spirits of the victims.

“A-Lung, mama is here,” an elderly woman wailed, calling for her son’s spirit to follow her home and not to linger at the site.

Officials said 31 of the victims had been identified, but warned that some of the bodies were so badly injured that DNA testing would be needed.

While initial results from the in-flight recorders, sent to Taipei for examination, are expected within a week, aviation officials cautioned it could take up to a year to determine the cause of the crash.

Joy and sorrow

A man with the surname Chen, who lost six family members, was seen shouting at airline staff in Penghu.  

“What happened to the plane and what was the cause (of the crash)? At the very least the (airline) should have someone on the scene to comfort the relatives,” he told TVBS news channel.

At a nearby funeral home, dozens of relatives sobbed as they waited to identify whether their loved ones.

In emotional scenes, overjoyed relatives were reunited with survivors, who were transferred to hospitals in Taipei and Kaohsiung from Penghu for further treatment.

Flying experience

The airline said 60-year-old pilot Lee Yi-liang had 22 years’ experience, including nearly 23,000 flight hours.

The co-pilot, 39-year-old Chiang Kuan-hsin, had two and a half years’ flying experience. He was also killed in the crash.

TransAsia, Taiwan’s first private airline,​ said it planned to offer each family of the deceased TW$1 million (S$41​,400) and TW$200,000 to each of the injured.  

The airline ​also runs international flights to China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Vietnam. It is due to launch the island’s first low-cost airline later this year. 

Source: AFP

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