Colombia plane crash was 'murder': Bolivian minister
Bolivia's defence minister said on Friday a plane crash that killed 71 people travelling to Colombia aboard a Bolivian-registered charter plane was "murder," accusing the pilot of flying with insufficient fuel. "This was definitely no accident. This was a homicide. What happened in Medellin was murder," Defence Minister Reymi Ferreira said. The LaMia airlines plane slammed into the mountains outside Medellin last week, killing most of Brazilian football team Chapecoense Real as they travelled to a match. A harrowing recording has emerged of the pilot radioing the control tower to report he was out of fuel. Investigations are ongoing, but Colombia's civil aviation safety chief has said the plane disregarded international rules on fuel reserves. Bolivia has suspended the airline's permit and arrested its manager and his son, who is an official in the civil aviation authority. Ferreira accused the plane's pilot, Miguel Quiroga, who died in the crash, of ignoring regulations requiring him to refuel mid-route. "Obviously, if the pilot had complied with the regulation, which is to land in Cobija (Bolivia) or Bogota (Colombia), or had at least declared an emergency from the beginning, before he was about to have an accident, it's possible this tragedy would not have happened," he said.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2016-12-12/unaligned/colombia-plane-crash-was-murder-bolivian-minister
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Colombia plane crash was 'murder': Bolivian minister
Bolivia's defence minister said on Friday a plane crash that killed 71 people travelling to Colombia aboard a Bolivian-registered charter plane was "murder," accusing the pilot of flying with insufficient fuel. "This was definitely no accident. This was a homicide. What happened in Medellin was murder," Defence Minister Reymi Ferreira said. The LaMia airlines plane slammed into the mountains outside Medellin last week, killing most of Brazilian football team Chapecoense Real as they travelled to a match. A harrowing recording has emerged of the pilot radioing the control tower to report he was out of fuel. Investigations are ongoing, but Colombia's civil aviation safety chief has said the plane disregarded international rules on fuel reserves. Bolivia has suspended the airline's permit and arrested its manager and his son, who is an official in the civil aviation authority. Ferreira accused the plane's pilot, Miguel Quiroga, who died in the crash, of ignoring regulations requiring him to refuel mid-route. "Obviously, if the pilot had complied with the regulation, which is to land in Cobija (Bolivia) or Bogota (Colombia), or had at least declared an emergency from the beginning, before he was about to have an accident, it's possible this tragedy would not have happened," he said.<br/>