‘Bhool-ja’ is not the name of any
airline. It means ‘forget it’. It represents a mindset, a mental
inertia, of those who choose lip service over actions, cosmetics over
contents, first aid over root causes and ‘buddyism’ over competence.
When a state adopts this mindset as its official policy, a series of
events begin to happen. Buddies become director generals and shakedown
inspections replace stringent airworthiness requirements and procedures.
Check out a Boeing 737-200 manual, and you will find daily checks,
transit checks, B checks, C checks and D checks, but nowhere will you
find ‘shakedown’ checks that have been recently ordered by the
government to give out the impression that it is doing something
important. ‘Bhool-ja’ is based on the belief that peoples’ memory, anger
and emotions have a short shelf-life and can be easily pacified by lame
statements such as “the PM and president have taken notice of the
accident or they have ordered an enquiry”. That is where all matters
come to an end.
For
any accident to happen there ought to be immediate, contributory and
root causes. The current buddy system has created leaders who are
neither capable nor interested in determining the root causes. Although a
system of permits, licenses, and approvals exists for most functions,
they continue to remain poorly regulated. The aeroplane that crashed in
Islamabad and killed 127 persons had all the licenses, approvals and
airworthiness certificates. Only if these had been effective, there
would have been no need to order the vague, superficial and frivolous
‘shakedown’ inspections.
We
need to do away with the ‘bhool-ja’ approach, de-politicise our
institutions and insist that they follow professional and ethical
standards. Our Buddy Aviation Authority (BAA) is just not in the right
business. It took it three years and two letters in the press to correct
the spellings of what was written as ‘Perlimantrians’ at the Jinnah
Airport’s check-in counter. An organization that cannot see dozens of
people smoking in the lounges, and scores smoking on the concourse of
the airport, can hardly be trusted to keep an eye on the engineering
aspects of modern-day jet airliners.
Naeem Sadiq
Karachi
Source: http://www.thenews.com.pk
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