The Ministry of National Defense (MND) has been censured over a training mishap last year involving an E-2K airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft that skidded off the runway after its landing gear was not deployed due to pilot error, the Control Yuan said Friday.
A motion was approved to reprimand the MND on Thursday after the investigation into the case concluded, the Control Yuan, which is responsible for investigating and censuring illegal or negligent acts by public servants or agencies, said in a news release.
According to the Air Force Command Headquarters, the incident happened when a serial No. 2503 AEW aircraft skidded off the runway while landing at Pingtung County airbase on Nov. 25 last year. No one was injured, but the poor maneuver left the plane seriously damaged.
Photo: Taipei Times file
Members of the Control Yuan’s Committee on Foreign and National Defense Affairs Pu Chung-cheng (浦忠成), Lai Ting-ming (賴鼎銘) and Hsiao Tzu-yu (蕭自佑) said in the press statement that the two trainee pilots had failed to carry out proper pre-landing checks as they approached the runway.
This major oversight included not making sure the landing gear was down, even though the co-pilot had called for a “gear check” during a traffic call, the committee members said.
Another mistake was that during the plane’s descent, the instructor had intentionally switched off the landing gear warning as part of the training, but this resulted in the two pilots becoming preoccupied with other tasks and not paying the landing gear enough attention, they said.
The third oversight was that ground operations supervisors failed to notice in time that the E-2K’s landing gear had not been deployed as the plane approached the runway.
The committee members said the case caught their attention because a similar incident had happened in 1997 that also involved an Air Force E-2 Hawkeye (E-2T variant) being damaged after pilots failed to deploy the landing gear.
They said flight safety was in question if pilots were unable to respond to emergencies, and demanded that the Air Force make improvements to their training.
CAUTION: Based on intelligence from the nation’s security agencies, MOFA has cautioned Taiwanese travelers about heightened safety risks in China-friendly countries The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday urged Taiwanese to be aware of their safety when traveling abroad, especially in countries that are friendly to China. China in June last year issued 22 guidelines that allow its courts to try in absentia and sentence to death so-called “diehard” Taiwanese independence activists, even though Chinese courts have no jurisdiction in Taiwan. Late last month, a senior Chinese official gave closed-door instructions to state security units to implement the guidelines in countries friendly to China, a government memo and a senior Taiwan security official said, based on information gathered by Taiwan’s intelligence agency. The
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, said yesterday that it is looking to hire 8,000 people this year, at a time when the tech giant is expanding production capacity to maintain its lead over competitors. To attract talent, TSMC would launch a large-scale recruitment campaign on campuses across Taiwan, where a newly recruited engineer with a master’s degree could expect to receive an average salary of NT$2.2 million (US$60,912), which is much higher than the 2023 national average of NT$709,000 for those in the same category, according to government statistics. TSMC, which accounted for more than 60 percent
Tung Tzu-hsien (童子賢), a Taiwanese businessman and deputy convener of the nation’s National Climate Change Committee, said yesterday that “electrical power is national power” and nuclear energy is “very important to Taiwan.” Tung made the remarks, suggesting that his views do not align with the country’s current official policy of phasing out nuclear energy, at a forum organized by the Taiwan People’s Party titled “Challenges and Prospects of Taiwan’s AI Industry and Energy Policy.” “Taiwan is currently pursuing industries with high added- value and is developing vigorously, and this all requires electricity,” said the chairman
‘POOP ON STAGE’: The song, which talks about the reluctance to graduate and anxiety about a lack of job opportunities, resonated with many students’ feelings The original song Poop on Stage has been chosen as National Taiwan University’s (NTU) graduation song this year, sparking much debate regarding the song’s title and content, which describes students’ anxiety about post-graduation unemployment. The title, Shang Tai Da Bian (上台大便), is a play on words that literally means “go on stage to poop.” The first three characters, shang tai da (上台大), also mean “to attend NTU,” as “Taida” is a common abbreviation for the university. The last character, bian (便), can mean “convenient” or “then,” but is more commonly associated with defecation. The lyrics of the song describe students’ reluctance to graduate and