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Saturday, 6 September 2014

Mystery plane near Mumbai http://ift.tt/1qr6NkQ

Mystery plane gives jitters to international airliners near Mumbai



India's dangerous western neighbourhood that is

kept under aerial surveillance by military planes of global

superpowers gave the jitters to some international commercial

flights flying over the Arabian Sea about 450 to 480km from

Mumbai's coastline early on Saturday morning.



[IMG]http://ift.tt/1oTc1jG]



An Etihad aircraft winging its way from Abu Dhabi to the Far

East had its traffic collision avoidance system (TCAS) alarm

going off loudly in the cockpit at 6.54am (IST), indicating that

another aircraft had got dangerously close to it by breaching the

minimum 1,000 feet of vertical separation that has to be

maintained for safety.



Some other international airlines flying near Mumbai on

Saturday morning also reportedly had their TCAS buzzing. The

warning came when the aircraft — not originating from or

destined for Mumbai — were on aerial route P-574 between the

reporting points Bodik and Adpap over the Arabian Sea and

flying at 36,500 feet, said sources.



"The indication Etihad aircraft got was of an unidentified plane

flying just 500 feet below it. It immediately reported this to the

Mumbai air traffic control (ATC), which had no such plane on its

radar nor had any information of another aircraft being supposed

to be so close below the Etihad flight," said a senior official.



Luckily for Etihad and other airliners which had their collision

alarms ringing, said sources, the breach of vertical separation

(500 feet) was not serious enough to lead to the triggering off of

their "resolutionary advisory" in which an automatic message is

generated for pilots to immediately change course to avoid

collision.



The Mumbai ATC have reported the matter to the directorate

general of civil aviation (DGCA), which is now investigating this

case as the credentials of the unidentified plane are unlikely to

be ever known.



However, sources said the unidentified plane could have

belonged to the US Air Force, and it was not on any civil or

military radar. The US uses the Diego Garcia islands in the south

Indian Ocean as its air force base for keeping an eye on India's

troubled western neighborhood. Reconnaissance missions and

military exercises are mounted from these islands, they said.



"Military and government planes on sensitive or classified

missions like reconnaissance do not file their flight plans with

ATCs of the regions they will be flying over. Such planes fly with

'due regard' to civil air traffic using visual flight rules, which

basically mean they just see and fly," said sources. But

breaches of the 'minimum distance for vertical separation' in

areas swarming with such aircraft can be a hazard for

commercial traffic.



Since the warning came from planes flying at 36,500 feet,

chances are the unidentified aircraft was on a reconnaissance

flight as fighter jets don't fly that high.



Mystery plane gives jitters to international airliners near Mumbai - TOI Mobile | The Times of India Mobile Site





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