Black boxes from Azerbaijan Airlines aircraft to be sent to Brazil.


The flight data recorders of the Azerbaijan Airlines aircraft, which crashed near the city of Aktau in Kazakhstan, will be delivered to Brazil for further examination. This decision was made by the Commission for the Investigation of the Aviation Incident, considering the recommendations of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and after consultations with the aviation authorities of Azerbaijan and Russia. The Center for Investigation and Prevention of Aviation Incidents of Brazil (CENIPA) will analyze the information from the flight data recorders, reports Radio Liberty.
On December 25, in the morning, the Azerbaijan Airlines plane, which was flying from Baku to Grozny, crashed near Aktau. As a result, 38 people died.
According to information from Euronews and the Reuters agency, the cause of the crash was a Russian anti-aircraft missile system. According to Reuters reports, the missile was fired against a backdrop of 'aerial activities of drones' over Grozny and exploded near the aircraft, damaging its fuselage.
On December 27, Dmitry Yadrova, head of 'Rosaviation', confirmed that during the landing of the aircraft at Grozny airport, it was attacked by drones. He stated that the aircraft's commander was offered other airports in Russia for landing, but he decided to fly to Aktau. According to Euronews, the Azerbaijani government reported that the crew of the damaged aircraft requested an emergency landing, but was not allowed to land at any Russian airport.
Read also
- The White House is Cutting Funding for War Crimes Investigations in Ukraine
- The Office of the Prosecutor General is looking for a new head of the Internal Security Department
- Chemical Weapons: OPCW Found New Evidence of Russian War Crimes
- The Beginning of the End: Why Khamenei May Become Iran's Last Supreme Leader
- China responded to accusations of supplying weapons to parties in the war in Ukraine
- The Pentagon responded to whether the States have information about Iran's hidden uranium stockpile