Bloomberg
A four-month-old Ethiopian Airlines Boeing plane en route to Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, crashed on Sunday, killing all 149 passengers and eight crew, the airline said in a statement.
The crash is the second in five months involving a Max 8 after a Lion Air plane that had been delivered only 2 1/2 months earlier nose-dived into the Java Sea shortly after takeoff on October 29, killing all 189 on board.
Boeing Co. is aware of the Ethiopian crash reports and is monitoring, it said in a statement on its website.
The plane left Addis Ababa, Ethiopia at 8:38 am, and contact was lost six minutes later, according to the airline’s statement.
Biniyam Demissie, an airline spokesman, said by telephone there were no survivors.
The Ethiopian government “would like to express its deepest condolences to the families of those that have lost their loved ones on Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 on regular scheduled flight to Nairobi, Kenya this morning,†Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office said in the Twitter post.
NEW AIRCRAFT
The crash involved the latest Max 8 version of the Boeing narrow-body, Ethiopian said. The aircraft concerned, which bore the registration ET-AVJ, it said, was delivered new on November 15, according to Flight Global’s Cirium database. The jetliner was fitted with two CFM International Leap-1B engines.
Poor safety procedures and the inability of pilots to gain control of a malfunctioning aircraft may have contributed to the Lion Air crash, the first accident involving a 737 Max since the model entered service in May 2017, according to a preliminary report from
Indonesian investigators.