newsinsightplus.com 2018Top2023Lion March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaIndonesia’s Batik Air faces probe after pilots fall asleep mid-flightPublished36 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, The Batik Air plane briefly veered off course but was able to land safelyBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsIndonesia is investigating local carrier Batik Air after both pilots were found to have fallen asleep for 28 minutes mid-flight. The two men – who have both been temporarily suspended – fell asleep during a flight on 25 January from Sulawesi to the capital Jakarta. One of them was reportedly tired from helping care for his newborn twins. The Airbus A320 briefly veered off course but landed safely, with all 153 passengers and crew members unharmed. The 32-year-old pilot had told his co-pilot to take control of the aircraft about half an hour after take off, saying he needed to rest. The 28-year-old co-pilot agreed, according to a report from the transport ministry.But the co-pilot inadvertently fell asleep as well. According to the report, his wife had just given birth to one-month-old twin babies and he was helping with childcare.Jakarta air traffic control tried contacting the cockpit of the Batik Air A320 after their last recorded transmission but received no response. That radio silence lasted 28 minutes until the lead pilot woke up and realised that his co-pilot had also fallen asleep. He also found that the aircraft had briefly veered off course. The pilots then responded to calls from Jakarta and landed the plane safely.Medical tests before the flight deemed that the men were fit to fly. Their blood pressure and heart rate were normal and alcohol tests came back negative.But while the pilots appeared to be fully rested, the tests failed to determine whether the quality of their rest was good, aviation expert Alvin Lie told BBC Indonesian. Authorities have now “strongly reprimanded” Batik Air over the incident, with Indonesia’s head of air transport, M Kristi Endah Murni, saying that Batik Air should pay more attention to their crew’s rest time.Batik Air has said it “operates with adequate rest policy” and that it was “committed to implement all safety recommendations”.In 2019, the same airline was forced to have an emergency landing after the pilot fainted.Aviation regulations in most countries require at least two pilots to be present in the cockpit of commercial airliners. Additional reporting from BBC IndonesianRelated TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaIndonesiaMore on this storyIndonesia hit by some of strongest winds recordedPublished22 FebruaryWhat can Indonesia expect from a Prabowo presidency?Published15 FebruaryAn ‘impossible’ country tests its hard-won democracyPublished10 FebruaryBali plans tourist motorbike ban over misbehaviourPublished14 March 2023Lion Air crash plane ‘not airworthy’Published28 November 2018Top StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished20 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished8 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityGeoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?My abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warningIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSounds’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Haiti spirals to collapse as gangs tighten grip3Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes4Seven of the best moments from the Oscars5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style7Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer8Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosity9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder [ad_1] The plane, carrying 153 passengers, briefly veered off course while the pilots fell asleep. 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newsinsightplus.com 2018Top2023Lion March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaIndonesia’s Batik Air faces probe after pilots fall asleep mid-flightPublished36 minutes agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, The Batik Air plane briefly veered off course but was able to land safelyBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsIndonesia is investigating local carrier Batik Air after both pilots were found to have fallen asleep for 28 minutes mid-flight. The two men – who have both been temporarily suspended – fell asleep during a flight on 25 January from Sulawesi to the capital Jakarta. One of them was reportedly tired from helping care for his newborn twins. The Airbus A320 briefly veered off course but landed safely, with all 153 passengers and crew members unharmed. The 32-year-old pilot had told his co-pilot to take control of the aircraft about half an hour after take off, saying he needed to rest. The 28-year-old co-pilot agreed, according to a report from the transport ministry.But the co-pilot inadvertently fell asleep as well. According to the report, his wife had just given birth to one-month-old twin babies and he was helping with childcare.Jakarta air traffic control tried contacting the cockpit of the Batik Air A320 after their last recorded transmission but received no response. That radio silence lasted 28 minutes until the lead pilot woke up and realised that his co-pilot had also fallen asleep. He also found that the aircraft had briefly veered off course. The pilots then responded to calls from Jakarta and landed the plane safely.Medical tests before the flight deemed that the men were fit to fly. Their blood pressure and heart rate were normal and alcohol tests came back negative.But while the pilots appeared to be fully rested, the tests failed to determine whether the quality of their rest was good, aviation expert Alvin Lie told BBC Indonesian. Authorities have now “strongly reprimanded” Batik Air over the incident, with Indonesia’s head of air transport, M Kristi Endah Murni, saying that Batik Air should pay more attention to their crew’s rest time.Batik Air has said it “operates with adequate rest policy” and that it was “committed to implement all safety recommendations”.In 2019, the same airline was forced to have an emergency landing after the pilot fainted.Aviation regulations in most countries require at least two pilots to be present in the cockpit of commercial airliners. Additional reporting from BBC IndonesianRelated TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaIndonesiaMore on this storyIndonesia hit by some of strongest winds recordedPublished22 FebruaryWhat can Indonesia expect from a Prabowo presidency?Published15 FebruaryAn ‘impossible’ country tests its hard-won democracyPublished10 FebruaryBali plans tourist motorbike ban over misbehaviourPublished14 March 2023Lion Air crash plane ‘not airworthy’Published28 November 2018Top StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished20 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished8 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityGeoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?My abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warningIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSounds’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Haiti spirals to collapse as gangs tighten grip3Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes4Seven of the best moments from the Oscars5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style7Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer8Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosity9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder [ad_1] The plane, carrying 153 passengers, briefly veered off course while the pilots fell asleep. 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newsinsightplus.com 2024Kateabusive March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaLatam Airlines: Passengers injured after ‘technical’ issue mid-airPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Latam says the incident involved a Boeing 787 DreamlinerBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsSeveral people were injured on a Latam Airlines flight after a “technical event” caused a “strong movement”. The aircraft “just froze” after a “quick little drop”, one passenger told the New Zealand Herald.Seven passengers and three crew members were taken to hospital after landing in Auckland, the airline said, adding that their injuries were not serious.But emergency services said 12 people were taken to hospital, and one patient was in a serious condition.The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was travelling from Sydney to Auckland when the incident happened. Reports said multiple passengers felt the aircraft drop suddenly mid-flight. This threw some people out of their seats, causing them to hit their heads on the plane’s ceiling. “Latam deeply regrets any inconvenience and discomfort this situation may have caused its passengers, and reiterates its commitment to safety as a priority within the framework of its operational standards,” the airline said in a statement.Emergency response teams have been deployed to the airport. They said they had “assessed and treated approximately” 50 patients so far. Related TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaNew ZealandMore on this storyIndonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flightPublished4 hours agoWatch: United Airlines plane loses tyre during take-offPublished3 days agoCockpit window crack forces ANA Boeing to turn backPublished13 JanuaryMid-flight blowout a big problem for BoeingPublished8 JanuaryTop StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished45 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished6 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityMy abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warning’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’Geoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSoundsIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes3Seven of the best moments from the Oscars4Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder7’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’8’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer [ad_1] Passengers on the flight from Sydney to Auckland reported experiencing a “quick little drop”. Continue reading
newsinsightplus.com 2024Kateabusive March 11, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityAsiaChinaIndiaLatam Airlines: Passengers injured after ‘technical’ issue mid-airPublished1 hour agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Latam says the incident involved a Boeing 787 DreamlinerBy Joel GuintoBBC NewsSeveral people were injured on a Latam Airlines flight after a “technical event” caused a “strong movement”. The aircraft “just froze” after a “quick little drop”, one passenger told the New Zealand Herald.Seven passengers and three crew members were taken to hospital after landing in Auckland, the airline said, adding that their injuries were not serious.But emergency services said 12 people were taken to hospital, and one patient was in a serious condition.The Boeing 787 Dreamliner was travelling from Sydney to Auckland when the incident happened. Reports said multiple passengers felt the aircraft drop suddenly mid-flight. This threw some people out of their seats, causing them to hit their heads on the plane’s ceiling. “Latam deeply regrets any inconvenience and discomfort this situation may have caused its passengers, and reiterates its commitment to safety as a priority within the framework of its operational standards,” the airline said in a statement.Emergency response teams have been deployed to the airport. They said they had “assessed and treated approximately” 50 patients so far. Related TopicsAviation accidents and incidentsAsiaNew ZealandMore on this storyIndonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flightPublished4 hours agoWatch: United Airlines plane loses tyre during take-offPublished3 days agoCockpit window crack forces ANA Boeing to turn backPublished13 JanuaryMid-flight blowout a big problem for BoeingPublished8 JanuaryTop StoriesPalace faces questions as news agencies withdraw Kate’s Mother’s Day imagePublished45 minutes agoLive. Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer sweeps awards with best picture and actor winsThe outfits: Best actress Emma Stone and others show off classic stylesPublished6 hours agoFeaturesSeven of the best moments from the OscarsBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 seconds. VideoBarbie, Oppenheimer & a wardrobe mishap? The Oscars in 60 secondsThe full list of winners at the Oscars 2024Kate picture heats up rumours instead of quelling public curiosityMy abusive ex-boyfriend was given a verbal warning’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’Geoff Norcott: Should my son bother going to uni?Listen: Oscars Newscast Special. AudioListen: Oscars Newscast SpecialAttributionSoundsIs Europe doing enough to help Ukraine?Elsewhere on the BBCPractical, passionate and hilarious conversationsJoanna Lumley and Roger Allam return with their award-winning comedy playing a long-married coupleAttributionSounds’I will lie on my deathbed wishing I’d done more’Former spin doctor Alastair Campbell on what he’s learned from his life so farAttributionSoundsHow accurate are fitness trackers?Greg Foot gets sweaty in the name of science to find out!AttributionSoundsFrom iron age roundhouses to Victorian mansions…Rachel Hurdley uncovers what walls tell us about how we liveAttributionSoundsMost Read1Palace faces questions over Kate image2Buyers mis-sold caravans as full-time homes3Seven of the best moments from the Oscars4Oscars red carpet fashion: Stars turn on the style5Bodies of five skiers found in Swiss Alps6Australian teen pleads guilty to UK woman’s murder7’Town Halls’ woke jobs’ and ‘Palace’s doctored photo’8’HMRC gave me £49,000 relief, but wants it back’9Indonesian pilots both fall asleep mid-flight10Brianna’s mother meets mum of daughter’s killer [ad_1] Passengers on the flight from Sydney to Auckland reported experiencing a “quick little drop”. Continue reading