Cathay Pacific Ordered to Review Flight Intercepted by Nato Jets
L'essentiel
- Hong Kong's aviation regulator has ordered Cathay Pacific to review an incident where a London-bound flight was intercepted by Nato jets over Romania after losing contact with air traffic control.
- The airline must submit a report within a week.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
A Cathay Pacific flight bound for London was intercepted by Nato fighter jets over Romania after a temporary loss of contact with air traffic controllers.
Hong Kong’s aviation regulator has ordered Cathay Pacific Airways to conduct a comprehensive review of an incident involving a London-bound passenger flight that was intercepted by Nato fighter jets after temporarily losing contact with air traffic controllers over Romanian airspace last week.
The Civil Aviation Department (CAD) expressed serious concern for the second consecutive day on Thursday over the incident and set out the parameters of the review for Cathay.
It said preliminary information indicated that the flight adhered to its authorised routing throughout the journey. The flight later arrived at its destination safely, it added.
The department instructed Cathay to “follow up seriously” and submit the investigation report within a week over the July 4 incident.
“CAD has instructed [Cathay] to conduct a comprehensive review of the incident, including the operational condition of the aircraft, setting of communication equipment and communication with local air traffic control unit,” it said.
“[Cathay] has also been requested to thoroughly investigate the cause of the incident and to submit a detailed report. [Cathay] is conducting a comprehensive review as instructed, including meeting relevant crew members.
Questions ouvertes
- What caused the communication loss?
- Were safety protocols followed correctly?
- What are the implications for future flights?






