The Aviation Safety Council (ASC,
Singapore Airlines accepted the preliminary finding and said it was "deeply sorry" for the "terrible tragedy."
"They were our pilots, it was our aircraft, the aircraft should not have been on that runway and ... we accept full responsibility," Cheong Choong Kong, deputy chairman and chief executive officer of Singapore Airlines said at a news conference at the city-state's airport.
Data from the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and the flight data recorder (FDR) showed that the ground conditions at the airport in the poor weather, might have contributed to the tragedy, in which 81 of the 179 on board the flight, bound for Los Angeles, were killed.
The Boeing 747-400 jumbo jet burst into flames and crashed during takeoff at Chiang Kai-shek International Airport late Tuesday, as typhoon Xangsane pounded the island.
Kay Yong (
"The plane first slammed the Jersey barriers indicating the blocking of that part of the 5R runway that was under construction," said Yong.
The pilot, some crew members and survivors on board the ill-fated flight had reported that they felt the jet hit "something huge" before the accident broke the jet into three parts with an explosion. Two backhoes on the construction site were also destroyed by the jumbo jet.
The repair work on runway 5R began on Sept. 13 and is to be completed by Nov 12.
"We've got to understand what caused that error to be made and we will have to look at every contributory factor and understand how that mistake could have been made," Cheong said.
"It was obviously a pilot error; it was a human factor involved. We should also look to see whether safety features at airports are adequate."
Meanwhile, Prosecutor Song Kuo-yeh (
"It is very easy to see that the plane had wrongly taken the wrong runway, slamming into some steel objects and two mechanical backhoes there before exploding," Song said.
Signaling human error as a possible cause of the crash, the prosecutors' office in Taoyuan has barred the flight's pilot, Captain Foong Chee Kong, along with co-pilots Ng Kheng Leng and Latiff Cyrano from leaving the island pending further investigations, Song said.
On the other hand, to further confirm ground conditions in the poor weather at the airport is also considered a key element in the ASC's investigation, Yong said. The visibility of 500m to 600m due to the typhoon on the day of the accident rendered the aircraft out of sight of the control tower, the distance from the tower to the entrance of runway 5R being 1,500m, according to Yong. "Visual contact between the tower and the plane at that moment was impossible," he confirmed.



