If, emphasis on if, he was depressed I think it would be very unfair to call him a murderer.
It is terrible tragedy for me until there is compelling evidence of it being something else.
nope, murderer.
If, emphasis on if, he was depressed I think it would be very unfair to call him a murderer.
It is terrible tragedy for me until there is compelling evidence of it being something else.
Surprisingly easy to avoid this disaster according to on air crew from an American airline. They said they have a three person rule, on trans-Atlantic flights they have three crew .. one on rest and two operational. If one wants to leave the flight deck the third must be there before the other leaves. If a short haul then a flight attendant is used instead so there is no chance of one person gaining total control.
Have to say, might be better to completely do away with the door altogether. Passengers are pretty clued up these days to tackle hijackers, especially if they can't get weapons on board. Safety in numbers and all that.
Someone made a good point elsewhere. This may act as a good deterrent as it makes it harder as it becomes more personal, but if someone is committed an unaware flight attendant isn't a massive barrier to overcome.
Some articles are suggested that the person inside the cockpit can block a pin code re-entry into the cockpit. There is probably a good reason for this, but why have that as a feature?
its an airbus the computer wouldn't let him dop it in anything but a controlled way.
Just removing the door would bring us back to the pre-9/11 problem of easy access for hijackers. A solution is needed which allows the crew to access the cockpit but doesn't allow the passengers to do so
My (probably quite expensive) suggestion would be to have the area behind the cockpit dedicated to pilot facilities, so that no one would have to leave the pilot area for rest breaks or toilet breaks or drinks or anything. The door between the cockpit and the crew area could be a very simple door, even without a lock, and the door between the crew area and the passenger area could have all the fancy reinforcements and locks of current cockpit doors. This would enable any of the crew to keep unwanted guests out of the crew area and cockpit, but would prevent anyone from locking crew out of the cockpit.
What a dick, just read about this, if he wanted to kill himself why not jump off a bridge instead of murdering 150 people or what ever it was. They said they could here peoples screams just before the crash![]()
Maybe, but it also introduces a potential new attack vector - hacking or physically taking over a ground station. I for one would still prefer a human being in charge of a plane I was travelling on, even with this incident.
Surely software can be written to 'not hit ground'?
That makes landing the aeroplane a bit difficult.
Surely software can be written to 'not hit ground'?