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All 217 aboard were
killed when EgyptAir Flight 990 crashed
into the Atlantic Ocean 60 miles SE of
Nantucket Island, Massachusetts, on
October 31, 1999. The NTSB concluded
that the probable cause of the crash was
a series of control inputs made by
Al-Batouti.
Family and
personal life
ElBatouty came from a
socially elite family in Egypt. His
father was a mayor and a landowner and
family members were well educated and
affluent.
Al-Batouti was
married and had five children. The
youngest, Aya, who was ten at the time
of the crash, suffered from lupus, and
was undergoing medical treatment in Los
Angeles. Efforts had been made at
EgyptAir, both at a company level and at
an employee level to provide assistance
to help defray the medical expenses.
Al-Batouti was
approaching retirement (aviation
regulations prevented him from flying as
a commercial airline pilot after age
60), and had planned to split his time
between a 10-bedroom villa outside of
Cairo and a beach house near El Alamin.
Career
Al-Batouti had been
drafted into the Egyptian army, where he
was trained as a pilot and flight
instructor. He then worked for a time as
an instructor at the Egyptian Air
Institute. His position there was
described by one colleague as "high
profile".
While in the Army,
Al-Batouti served as a pilot in both the
1967 Six-Day War and the 1973 Yom Kippur
War.
Batouti hired on with
EgyptAir on September 8, 1987. He held
type ratings for the Boeing 737-200,
Boeing 767-200 and the 767-300. At the
time of the crash, he had logged 12,538
hours of flight time, with 5,755 as
pilot in command and 5,191 in the 767.
At the time of his
death, Al-Batouti was the most senior
first officer (F/O) flying the 767 at
EgyptAir. He was not promoted to captain
because he declined to sit for the exam
for his Air Transport Pilot (ATP) rating.
The ATP study
materials and exam are conducted in
English (the international language of
aviation), and Al-Batouti did not have
sufficient English proficiency. Once he
reached 55, the possibility of promotion
was further hindered by EgyptAir policy
which prevented promotions after that
age.
According to
statements made by his colleagues to the
NTSB during the Flight 990 investigation,
he did not want to be promoted, because
as senior F/O, he could get his
preferred flight schedules, which
assisted in his family situation.
Despite not being promoted to captain,
he was often referred to by that title
because of his previous experience at
the Egypt Air Institute.
Flight 990
Batouti was the co-pilot
that the National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) suspected of deliberately
crashing Flight 990 into the ocean, an
assertion denied by Egyptian authorities.
According to the NTSB,
Batouti seized the plane's controls and
turned off the autopilot after the
captain left the cockpit. He then led
the plane into a dive, continually
repeating, "I rely on God". The pilot
then came back into the cockpit, tried
to stop the dive, but could not prevent
the plane from crashing into the ocean.
Some investigators
learned that he was supposedly
reprimanded for inappropriate behavior
with female guests at the Hotel
Pennsylvania, a New York City hotel
often used by EgyptAir crews. Hatem
Roushdy, an EgyptAir official said to be
responsible for the alleged reprimand
was a passenger on Flight 990.
The details of the
reprimand included the removal of Gameel
Al-Batouti's privilege of flying any
flight to the United States, and that
Flight 990 would be his last."
There was western
media speculation that Batouti may have
been a terrorist; his family and friends
indicated that he had no strong
political beliefs.
The Egyptian Civil
Aviation Authority disputes the cause of
the crash, blaming technical problems,
rather than any action of Al-Batouti.
The Flight Route
Designation for New York to Cairo is now
Flight 986 as a Boeing 777-200ER.
Flight details
Flight 990 was being
flown in a Boeing 767-366ER aircraft
with the registration SU-GAP, named
Tuthmosis III after a pharaoh from
the 18th Dynasty. The flight was
carrying 14 crew members and 203
passengers from seven countries (Canada,
Egypt, Germany, Sudan, Syria, United
States, and Zimbabwe).
Included in the
passenger manifest were over 30 Egyptian
military officers; among them were two
brigadier-generals, a colonel, major,
and four other air force officers.
Newspapers in Cairo were prevented by
censors from reporting the officers'
presence on the flight.
Flight 990 was crewed
by 14 people, 10 flight attendants, and
four flight crewmembers. Because of the
scheduled flight time, the flight
required two complete flight crews (each
consisting of one captain and one first
officer). EgyptAir designated one crew
as the "active crew" and the other as
the "cruise crew" (sometimes also
referred to as the "relief crew").
It was customary for
the active crew to make the takeoff and
fly the first four to five hours of the
flight. The cruise crew then assumed
control of the aircraft until about one
to two hours prior to landing, at which
point the active crew returned to the
cockpit and assumed control of the
airplane.
EgyptAir designated
the captain of the active crew as the
Pilot-in-Command or the Commander of the
flight. The active crew consisted of
Captain Mahmoud El Habashy and First
Officer Adel Anwar, and the cruise crew
were Captain Amal El Sayed and First
Officer Gameel Al-Batouti (the NTSB
reports use the spelling "El Batouty").
ATC tracking
U.S. Air Traffic
Controllers provide transatlantic flight
control operations as a part of the "New
York Center" (referred to in radio
conversations simply as "Center" and
abbreviated in the reports as "ZNY").
The airspace is divided into "areas,"
and "Area F" was the section that
oversaw the airspace through which
Flight 990 was flying.
Transatlantic
commercial air traffic travels via a
system of routes called North Atlantic
Tracks, and Flight 990 was the only
aircraft at the time assigned to fly
North Atlantic Track Zulu. There are
also a number of military operations
areas over the Atlantic, called "Warning
Areas," which are also monitored by New
York Center, but records show that these
were inactive the night of the accident.
Interaction between
ZNY and Flight 990 was completely
routine. After takeoff, Flight 990 was
handled by three different controllers
as it climbed up in stages to its
assigned cruising altitude.
The aircraft, like
all commercial airliners, was equipped
with a Mode C transponder, which
automatically reported the plane's
altitude when queried by the ATC radar.
At 1:44, the transponder indicated that
Flight 990 had leveled off at FL330.
Three minutes later, the controller
requested that Flight 990 switch
communications radio frequencies for
better reception. A pilot on Flight 990
acknowledged on the new frequency. This
was the last transmission received from
Flight 990.
The records of the
radar returns then indicate a sharp
descent:
0649:53Z - FL329
0650:05Z - FL315
0650:17Z - FL254
0650:29Z - FL183
(this was the last altitude report
received by ATC)
In a span of 36
seconds, the plane dropped 14,600 feet (nearly
three miles). Several subsequent "primary"
returns (simple radar reflections
without the encoded Mode C altitude
information) were received by ATC, the
last being at 0652:05. At 0654, the ATC
controller tried notifying Flight 990
that radar contact had been lost, but
received no reply.
Two minutes later,
the controller contacted ARINC to
determine if Flight 990 had switched to
an oceanic frequency too early. ARINC
attempted to contact Flight 990 on
SELCAL, also with no response. The
controller then contacted a nearby
aircraft, Lufthansa Flight 499, asking
it to see if it could raise Flight 990.
The German carrier responded that it had
no radio contact and was not receiving
any ELT signals. Air France Flight 439
was asked to overfly the last known
position of Flight 990, but reported
nothing out of the ordinary. Center also
provided coordinates of Flight 990's
last-known position to Coast Guard
rescue aircraft.
Crash
Flight data showed that the flight
controls were used to move the elevators
in order to initiate and sustain the
steep dive. The flight deviated from its
assigned altitude of 33,000 feet (FL330)
and dove to 16,000 feet over 44 seconds,
then climbed to 24,000 and began a final
dive, hitting the Atlantic Ocean about
two and a half minutes after leaving
FL330.
Radar and radio contact was lost 30
minutes after the aircraft departed JFK
Airport in New York on its flight to
Cairo. The cockpit voice recorder
recorded the First Officer repeating "I
rely on God" eleven times while the
Captain asked repeatedly "What is this?"
during the dive. There were no other
aircraft in the area. There was no
indication that an explosion occurred on
board. The engines operated normally for
the entire flight until they shut down
and the left engine was torn from the
wing from the stress of the maneuvers.
Search and rescue efforts
Search and rescue operations were
launched within minutes of the loss of
radar contact, with the bulk of the
operation being conducted by the United
States Coast Guard (USCG). At 3:00 AM,
an HU-25 Falcon jet took off from
Airbase Cape Cod Mass, becoming the
first rescue party to reach the last
known position of the plane. All USCG
cutters in the area were immediately
diverted to search for the aircraft, and
an urgent marine information broadcast
was issued, requesting mariners in the
area to keep a lookout for the downed
aircraft.
At sunrise, the U.S. Merchant Marine
Academy training vessel King's Pointer
found an oil sheen and some small pieces
of debris. Rescue efforts continued by
air and by sea, with a group of USCG
cutters covering 10,000 square miles on
October 31 with the hope of locating
survivors, although all that could be
recovered was a single body in the
debris field.
Atlantic Strike Team members brought two
truckloads of equipment from Fort Dix to
Newport to set up an incident command
post. Officials from the Navy and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration were dispatched to join
the command. The search and rescue
operation was eventually suspended on
November 1, 1999, with the rescue
vessels and aircraft moving instead to
recovery operations.
These operations were ceased when the
naval vessels USS Grapple and USNS
Mohawk and the NOAA research vessel
Whiting arrived to take over salvage
efforts, including recovery of the bulk
of the wreckage from the seabed.
In total, a C-130, an H-60 helicopter,
the HU-25 Falcon and the cutters USCGC
Monomoy, USCGC Spencer, USCG Reliance,
USCG Bainbridge Island, USCG Juniper,
USCG Point Highland USCG Chinook, and
USCG Hammerhead, along with their
supporting helicopters, participated in
the search.
A second salvage effort was made in
March 2000 that recovered the aircraft's
second engine and some of the cockpit
controls.
Investigation
Under the International Civil Aviation
Organization treaty, the investigation
of an airplane crash in international
waters is under the jurisdiction of the
country of registry of the aircraft. At
the request of the Egyptian government,
the U.S. National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) took the lead in this
investigation, with the Egyptian Civil
Aviation Authority (ECAA) participating.
The investigation was supported by the
Federal Aviation Administration, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
United States Coast Guard, the U.S.
Department of Defense, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
Boeing Commercial Airplanes, EgyptAir,
and Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Engines.
Two weeks after the crash, the NTSB
proposed declaring the crash a criminal
event and handing the investigation over
to the FBI. Egyptian government
officials protested, and Omar Suleiman,
head of Egyptian intelligence, traveled
to Washington to join the investigation.
Hamdi Hanafi Taha defection
In February 2000, EgyptAir 767 captain
Hamdi Hanafi Taha sought political
asylum in London after landing his
aircraft there. In his statement to
British authorities, he claimed to have
knowledge of the circumstances behind
the crash of Flight 990. He is reported
to have said that he wanted to "stop all
lies about the disaster," and to put
much of the blame on EgyptAir
management.
Reaction was swift, with the NTSB and
FBI sending officials to interview Taha,
and Osama El-Baz, an advisor to Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak, saying, "This
pilot can't know anything about the
plane, the chances that he has any
information [about the crash of Flight
990] are very slim."
EgyptAir officials also immediately
dismissed Taha's claim. Taha's
information was reportedly of little use
to the investigators, and his
application for asylum was turned down.
NTSB
The NTSB's final report was issued on
March 21, 2002, after a two-year
investigation. Their conclusion was:
The National Transportation Safety Board
determines that the probable cause of
the EgyptAir flight 990 accident is the
airplane's departure from normal cruise
flight and subsequent impact with the
Atlantic Ocean as a result of the relief
first officer's flight control inputs.
The reason for the relief first
officer's actions was not determined.
ECAA
The ECAA's final report, based largely
on the NTSB's, came to distinctly
different conclusions:
2. There is evidence pointing to a
mechanical defect in the elevator
control system of the accident. The best
evidence of this is the shearing of
certain rivets in two of the right
elevator bellcranks and the shearing of
an internal pin in a power control
actuator (PCA) that was attached to the
right elevator. Although this evidence,
combined with certain data from the
Flight Data Recorder (FDR), points to a
mechanical cause for the accident,
reaching a definitive conclusion at this
point is not possible because of the
complexity of the elevator system, the
lack of reliable data from Boeing, and
the limitations of the simulation and
ground tests conducted after the
accident. Additional evidence of
relevant Boeing 767 elevator
malfunctions in incidents involving Aero
Mexico (February 2000), Gulf Air, and
American Airlines (March, 2001). There
were also two incidents on a United
Airlines airplane in 1994 and 1996.
3. Investigators cannot rule out the
possibility that the RFO may have taken
emergency action to avoid a collision
with an unknown object. Although
plausible, this theory cannot be tested
because the United States has refused to
release certain radar calibration and
test data that are necessary to evaluate
various unidentified radar returns in
the vicinity of Flight 990.
The investigation and its results drew
criticism from the Egyptian Government,
which advanced several alternative
theories about mechanical malfunction of
the aircraft. In Western countries, the
Egyptian rejection of the NTSB report
was attributed to a strong Egyptian
cultural aversion to suicide. The
theories proposed by Egyptian
authorities were tested by the NTSB, and
none were found to match the facts.
For example, an elevator assembly
hardover (in which the elevator in a
fully extended position sticks because
the hinge catches on the tail frame)
proposed by the Egyptians was discounted,
because the flight recorder data showed
the elevator was in a "split condition."
In this state, one side of the elevator
is up and the other down; on the 767,
this condition is only possible through
flight control input (e.g., one yoke is
pushed forward, the other pulled
backward).
Nevertheless, the investigation is
commonly held to have reached incorrect
conclusions especially, but not only, in
Egypt. Many Egyptians are convinced that
sabotage is the likeliest cause of the
crash of a flight that was carrying 33
Egyptian army officers.
Another theory proposes that the
aircraft was passing through a military
zone, without proper co-ordination, and
suffered from electromagnetic
interference.
Media
coverage
While the official investigation was
proceeding, speculation about the crash
ran rampant in both the Western media
and the Egyptian press.
Western
media speculation
Long before the NTSB had issued its
final report, Western media began to
speculate about the meaning of the taped
cockpit conversations and about possible
motives (including suicide and terrorism)
behind Al-Batouti's actions on the
flight. The speculation, in part, was
based on leaks from an unnamed federal
law enforcement official that the crew
member in the co-pilot's seat was
recorded as saying, "I made my decision
now. I put my faith in God's hands."
During a press conference held on
November 19, 1999, the NTSB's Jim Hall
denounced such speculation and said that
it had "done a disservice to the long-standing
friendship between the people of the
United States of America and Egypt."
On November 20, 1999, the Associated
Press quoted senior American officials
as saying that the quote was not in fact
on the tape. It is believed that the
speculation arose from a mistranslation
of an Egyptian Arabic phrase meaning "I
rely on God."
London's Sunday Times, quoting
unnamed sources, speculated that Al-Batouti
had been "traumatized by war," and was
depressed because much of his fighter
squadron in the 1973 war had been killed.
Egyptian
media reaction and speculation
The Egyptian media reacted in outrage to
the speculations in the Western press.
The state-owned Al Ahram Al Misai
called Al-Batouti a "martyr," and the
Islamist Al Shaab covered the
story under a headline that stated, "America's
goal is to hide the truth by blaming the
EgyptAir pilot."
At least two Egyptian newspapers, Al
Gomhuriya and Al Musawwar,
offered theories that the aircraft was
accidentally shot down by the U.S. Other
theories were advanced by the Egyptian
press as well, including the Islamist
Al Shaab, which speculated that a
Mossad/CIA conspiracy was to blame (since,
supposedly, EgyptAir and El Al crews
stay at the same hotel in New York).
Al Shaab also accused U.S. officials
of secretly recovering the FDR,
reprogramming it, and throwing it back
into the water to be publicly recovered.
Unifying all the Egyptian press was a
stridently held belief that it "is
inconceivable that a pilot would kill
himself by crashing a jet with 217
people aboard. 'It is not possible that
anyone who would commit suicide would
also kill so many innocent people
alongside him,' said Ehab William, a
surgeon at Cairo's Anglo-American
Hospital," reported the Cairo Times.
The Egyptian media also reacted against
Western speculation of terrorist
connections. The Cairo Times
reported, "The deceased pilot's nephew,
Walid Al Batouti, has lashed out in
particular against speculation that his
uncle could have been a religious
extremist. 'He loved the United States,'
the nephew said. 'If you wanted to go
shopping in New York, he was the man to
speak to, because he knew all the stores.'
The family adopted Donald Duck (Batout
in Arabic, from batt, or duck) as
its emblem, and toy Donalds are
scattered throughout the nephew's and
the uncle's houses."
Documentaries
The story of the flight has been
featured in the Discovery Channel Canada/National
Geographic television show Mayday
(Air Crash Investigation, Air
Emergency). In the show, the flight
is dramatized based on ATC tapes as well
as the CVR recordings.
In interviews conducted for the program,
Al-Batouti's family members continue to
vehemently dispute the suicide/deliberate
crash theories and dismiss them as
biased. Nevertheless, the program
implies he crashed the plane for
personal reasons: he had been severely
reprimanded by his boss for sexual
harassment, and this boss was actually
on the plane.
The dramatization of the crash also
depicts Al-Batouti forcing the plane
down with the pilot attempting to pull
the plane up. Despite this, upon
conclusion the program stresses the
official NTSB conclusion, which makes no
mention of a suicide mission or a
deliberate crash. Rather, it simply
states that the crash was a direct
result of actions made by the co-pilot.
Wikipedia.org
March 21, 2002
Washington, DC -
The National Transportation Safety Board today
determined that the probable cause of the crash of
EgyptAir flight 990 was the airplane's departure from
normal cruise flight and subsequent impact with the
Atlantic Ocean as a result of the relief first officer's
flight control inputs. The reason for the relief first
officer's actions was not determined.
EgyptAir flight
990, a Boeing 767-366ER, SU-GAP, crashed into the
Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts
on October 31, 1999. The scheduled flight was being
operated from John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK),
New York, to Cairo International Airport, Cairo, Egypt.
There were 14 crewmembers and 203 passengers. All on
board were killed and the airplane was destroyed.
Because the
crash occurred in international waters, the Egyptian
government was initially responsible for the
investigation under the provisions of Annex 13 to the
Convention on International Civil Aviation. However, the
Egyptian government delegated the conduct of the
investigation to the NTSB under the provisions of Annex
13.
The
investigation into the cause of the crash has been quite
extensive and has involved months of testing and
research during which investigators evaluated various
scenarios to determine the circumstances leading up to
the crash.