Military bosses were told
"it is important the RNZAF does not cover up" its illegal shipment of
pyrotechnic canisters which endangered the lives of hundreds of
passengers on an Air New Zealand flight.
The incident was first
revealed by the New Zealand Herald, which has now been provided with a
copy of the report into the safety breach that says it "endangered the
lives of civilians" and "brought the reputation of the RNZAF under
considerable threat".
The internal report told military
commanders that they could minimize the damage to the air force's
reputation by telling appropriate agencies it happened. The report said
"openness to relevant authorities" could "prevent serious repercussion
or damage to the RNZAF's reputation should concealment be uncovered by
any airline, TAIC [Transport Accident Investigation Commission] or media
in the future".
As it happened, no one was told of the incident
until it was uncovered by the Herald during its investigation into the
air force's safety record. Major changes have now been ordered to the
air force's safety structure and external oversight.
The air
force has maintained the failure to tell the Civil Aviation Authority,
TAIC, Air NZ or any other party was accidental. TAIC was initially
misinformed about the nature of the incident - a Defence Force spokesman
later said the air force "failed to close the loop" by providing the
investigation report into the incident.
The CAA is investigating
after the Herald revealed the incident, in which two chemical oxygen
generators were put on board an Air NZ flight from Auckland to Canada in
2009. The same sort of canisters - banned from passenger flights - led
to a passenger jet disaster, killing more than 100 people. The
investigation found military bosses could have been jailed over the
breach. The Defence Force could have been blacklisted from civilian
airlines.
Investigators found "a considerable number of larger
organizational factors and preconditions" led to the safety breach. It
also emerged the canisters flown to Canada were actually more dangerous
than previously revealed. Neither was properly wrapped or had "safety
pins" in place to stop accidental ignition, and one was damaged.
Investigators
found injury or death from the shipment could have led to "serious
criminal charges" against those involved - including Defence Force
commanders. The act of shipping the canisters could still see those
involved, and senior commanders, charged under the Crimes Act and/or
hazardous goods laws which carry a three-month jail term.
They
found "RNZAF's moral responsibility for the safety of the people" in the
flight was "of at least equal importance and significance as any other
liability".
The CAA investigation is ongoing. The initial inquiry
identified "communication processes between the RNZAF and civilian
agencies" as needing further investigation.
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