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'HE SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN FLYING'

Brit mum killed in plane crash when pilot ‘with no proper training’ crashed vertically into a runway killing all 50 passengers

THE pilot of a plane which crashed almost vertically into a runway at 280mph and killed all 50 people on board did not have a "genuine licence" and was not "properly trained", an inquest heard.

British mum Donna Bull, 53, was travelling on the Tatarsan Airlines jet from Moscow for a marketing trip when it crash-landed at Kazan Airport, Russia, in November 2013.

 Ms Bull, pictured here with children Kate and George, died after a pilot crash-landed onto a runway at 280mph
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Ms Bull, pictured here with children Kate and George, died after a pilot crash-landed onto a runway at 280mphCredit: PA:Press Association
 In a statement Ms Bull's heartbroken family said she died because of a "flagrant disregard for safety
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In a statement Ms Bull's heartbroken family said she died because of a "flagrant disregard for safetyCredit: SWNS:South West News Service
 A shocking image shows the wreckage of the Tatarstan Airlines plane which crashed killing all 50 people on board
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A shocking image shows the wreckage of the Tatarstan Airlines plane which crashed killing all 50 people on boardCredit: Reuters
 Firefighters rushed to the scene at Kazan Airport but there were no survivors
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Firefighters rushed to the scene at Kazan Airport but there were no survivorsCredit: RUSSIAN EMERGENCY MINISTRY

Ms Bull, who taught at international boarding school Bellerbys College in Cambridge, was unlawfully killed because the pilot "shouldn't have been flying the plane", coroner David Morris concluded.

The Boeing 727 aircraft had aborted one landing attempt and the crew had initiated a go-around procedure to line up for another run, the inquest at Peterborough Register Office heard.

The plane climbed to 2300ft and as the captain moved the nose down it began a 20-second plunge where the 23-year-old craft dived into the ground at a 75 degree angle.

Mr Morris said: "Frankly, he shouldn't have been flying the plane. It's as simple as that."

Suggesting the death would be "gross negligence manslaughter" if the inquest was being heard by a jury, he added: "The circumstances here are so gross.

"He should never have been in the plane and you cannot get more gross than that.

"The pilot did not have a genuine licence, he was not properly trained, he had no experience in the particular manoeuvre.

"That, together with numerous systemic failures, led to her death."

 Ms Bull has been described by her family as a "wonderful, caring and devoted mother and daughter"
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Ms Bull has been described by her family as a "wonderful, caring and devoted mother and daughter"Credit: SWNS:South West News Service
 The mum-of-two was a teacher at international boarding school Bellerbys College in Cambridge
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The mum-of-two was a teacher at international boarding school Bellerbys College in CambridgeCredit: SWNS:South West News Service

The court heard the plane was airworthy and that conditions at Kazan airport, in south-west Russia, were described as "benign" at the time of the crash by Air Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) investigator Paul Hannant.

He told the court the co-pilot had failed an English language test three times - but passed with 100% on the fourth attempt - and had passed training to become a pilot.

Speaking about the pilot, he said: "The captain was a navigator with the airline and he then got a pilot's licence. There was no record of him having done any pilot training."

The court heard one potential explanation for the crash which killed 44 passengers and six crew was the somatogravic illusion - where acceleration is confused for lift where there are no visual references for a pilot - with this phenomenon covered in basic training.

 Donna Bull was one of 50 people who died in the crash in November 2013
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Donna Bull was one of 50 people who died in the crash in November 2013Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

Afandi Darlington, from the AAIB, said: "It's possible the pilot may have sensed the aircraft was pitching nose up and this may explain why he has pulled a rather extreme control movement forward."

Speaking after the inquest, Ms Bull's son George, daughter Kate and stepmother Jenny described her as a "wonderful, caring and devoted mother and daughter".

It added: "She was the sunshine to all who knew her and there isn't a day that goes by that she is not missed. We miss her smile and arms around us.

"To lose a loved one as part of an accident is a tragedy, but to lose them in an incident that was wholly avoidable is so much more painful to bear.

"How could the authorities let inadequately trained engineers pilot a plane carrying passengers? Our lives and those of many others have been shattered by this flagrant disregard for safety."

 Coroner David Morris has said Ms Bull died because "the pilot did not have a genuine licence" and was "not properly trained"
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Coroner David Morris has said Ms Bull died because "the pilot did not have a genuine licence" and was "not properly trained"Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

The family's lawyer, Kieran Mitchell, from Slater and Gordon, said: "It is quite extraordinary that an airline could have such a disgraceful disregard for human life.

"It beggars belief how the local regulatory authorities in the Republic of Tatarstan, or indeed those of the Russian Federation, permitted commercial flight activities to be undertaken in such circumstances.

"It was surely only a matter of time before a tragedy, such as this befell them, leading to the loss of a much-loved mother."

The court heard that Tatarstan Airlines had its certificate revoked following the incident and that criminal proceedings were under way in Russia.


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