SFGate: Brazil Plane Crash May Haunt Government

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 Meanwhile, to cover for their incompetence, the
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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2007/07/18/internatio=
nal/i141836D91.DTL
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Wednesday, July 18, 2007 (AP)
Brazil Plane Crash May Haunt Government
By STAN LEHMAN, Associated Press Writer


   (07-18) 14:18 PDT SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) --

   Brazil's deadliest jetliner crash was an accident foretold. For months,
air safety concerns have been aired in congressional hearings, and pilots
and traffic controllers have worried for years about the short, slippery
runways at Brazil's busiest airport.

   Landing there is so challenging that pilots liken it to an aircraft
carrier — if they don't touch down precisely within the tarmac's
first 1,000 feet, they're warned to pull up and circle around again.

   The 6,362-foot-long runway at Sao Paulo's Congonhas airport appears to
have been a key factor in what has become Brazil's worst air disaster, and
critics condemned President Luis Inacio da Silva's government Wednesday
for failing to invest in safety measures adopted by other urban airports.

   None of the 186 people on board survived, TAM Linhas Aereas SA chief
executive Marco Antonio Bologna said Wednesday. Three TAM workers on the
ground also died and another 11 were hospitalized.

   Firefighters pulled at least 171 charred bodies from the site where the
Airbus-320 crashed Tuesday, igniting in a 1,830-degree fireball. The plane
slammed into a gas station and a TAM Airlines building after narrowly
clearing the airport's perimeter fence and rush-hour traffic on a
surrounding highway.

   "What appears to have happened is that he didn't manage to land and he
tried to take off again," said Capt. Marcos, a spokesman for the Sao Paulo
Fire Department, who would not release his last name in accordance with
department guidelines.

   Also, video of the landing shows Tam Flight 3054 from Porto Alegre coming
in faster than other planes, said Sen. Deonstenes Torres, chief of a
Senate commission investigating problems with Brazilian civil aviation.

   "On parts of the runway that most planes took 11 seconds to traverse, th=
is
plane took three," Torres said.

   Torres said the plane's two black boxes would be sent the U.S. for
analysis. Meanwhile, French and U.S. safety investigators are assisting
the Brazilians in probing the cause of the crash.

   International air safety experts have long warned of the danger of just
such an accident on the short runway at Sao Paulo's airport, especially in
heavy rain. Only the day before, two other planes skidded off the runway's
end.

   But Bologna said it was too early to say what went wrong.

   "We have to wait for the results of the investigations to know the cause=
,"
he said. "It would be premature to make any assumptions about the runway."

   Like many congested urban airports, Sao Paulo's domestic air travel hub =
is
surrounded by development and has no room for the runway extensions
recommended by air safety groups. But the International Federation of Air
Line Pilots' Associations said Wednesday the accident shows the need for
the next best thing — braking systems of soft cement beyond the
runway, where wheels can sink in and slow the jets to a safe stop.

   The soft cement is strong enough to support airport emergency vehicles,
but disintegrates into fragments when a heavy aircraft runs over it, thus
acting as a brake.

   Known as an arrestor bed, the system has prevented several planes from
ending up in the bay next to New York's John F. Kennedy International
Airport, said Gideon Ewers, the pilot group's spokesman.

   Critics condemned Silva's government for its failure to fix Brazil's air
traffic problems in the months since 154 people were killed in the
September collision of a Gol Airlines Boeing 737 with a small jet over the
Amazon rainforest.

   "Its been 10 months since the last worst air accident in Brazilian histo=
ry
and now we've had an accident worse than that," said David Fleischer, a
political scientist at the University of Brasilia. "If you look at what's
happened since September, the answer is nothing."

   Silva fears the military, which oversees Brazil's air traffic control
system and has filled top positions at the national aviation agency with
political appointees with little or no experience, Fleischer said.

   "It was a tragedy foretold," said political commentator Lucia Hippolito.
"The government has done nothing because of administrative inefficiency
and simple incompetence."

   Defense Minister Waldir Pires warned people not to point fingers.

   "It's a moment for caution, and until the results of the investigation a=
re
known, it's better to maintain sobriety and avoid quick judgments," Pires
said.

   The accident is certain to have political ramifications, however, if only
because the dead included Rep. Julio Redecker, 51, a leader of the
opposition Brazilian Social Democracy Party and vocal critic of Silva's
handling of the aviation crisis.

   "President Lula needs to act and not speak. Or his term will be marked by
the suffering and pain of so many Brazilians that could be still be
alive," read a statement from Redecker's party.

   Congressional investigations have raised questions about Brazil's
underfunded air traffic control systems, deficient radar and lack of
investment in infrastructure, even as airlines struggle to cope with a
surge in air travel caused by Brazil's booming economy.

   Concerned about being made scapegoats, air traffic controllers have
engaged in strikes and work slowdowns to raise safety concerns, causing
months of delays and cancelations. Throughout it all, one of the most
glaring problems has been the runway at Congonhas, in the heart of
Brazil's biggest city.

   On Monday, two planes skidded off the same runway, and on March 22, a
Boeing 737-400 overshot it in a heavy rain, stopping just short of a steep
drop-off to the adjacent highway.

   In February, a federal court briefly banned three types of large jets fr=
om
the runway, but was overruled on appeal by a court that said safety
concerns weren't sufficient to outweigh the severe economic ramifications.
Airbus-320s were not covered under the court's ban.

   The airport has tried to improve the runway, recently resurfacing it to
provide better braking in rainy conditions, but the new surface hadn't
dried enough for the next step, cutting deep grooves into the tarmac.

   Most of the 162 passengers and 24 TAM employees on board the domestic
flight were Brazilians, but an Argentine man and an Austrian were among
the victims, according to their countries' consulates. A Peruvian also was
aboard, TAM said.

   Outside Sao Paulo's main morgue, dozens of people watched silently as va=
ns
carrying the dead bodies arrived.

   "We never thought this would happen, but it's not surprising. This is
Brazil," said Richard Teofolo, a 30-year-old chauffeur. "There's blame to
go all around, but no one's going to take the responsibility in the end." -=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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