1977 Benghazi Libyan Arab Airlines Tu-154 crash

1977 Benghazi Libyan Arab Airlines Tu-154 crash

The aircraft involved in the accident, in Balkan Bulgarian livery
Accident summary
Date 2 December 1977
Summary Fuel starvation
Site near Benghazi, Libya
Passengers 159
Crew 6
Fatalities 59
Survivors 106
Aircraft type Tupolev Tu-154
Operator Libyan Arab Airlines leased from Balkan Bulgarian Airlines
Registration LZ-BTN
Flight origin King Abdulaziz International Airport, Saudi Arabia
Destination Benina International Airport, Libya

The 1977 Benghazi Libyan Arab Airlines Tu-154 crash occurred after a Tupolev Tu-154 ran out of fuel near Benghazi on 2 December 1977. A total of 59 passengers were killed in the crash.

Aircraft

The aircraft was a Tu-154A registered LZ-BTN and had its first flight in 1974.[1] It was one of six Tu-154s to be leased by Libyan Arab Airlines from Balkan Bulgarian Airlines for that year's pilgrim flights to Mecca for the Hajj.[1]

Accident

The aircraft took off from King Abdulaziz International Airport in Saudi Arabia on a flight to Benina International Airport in the Libyan city of Benghazi with a crew of six and 159 passengers – pilgrims returning to Libya from the Hajj – on board.[1] Egyptian airspace was closed to Libyan aircraft at the time, necessitating an indirect route to Benghazi instead of the direct route across Egypt; the crew reportedly did not plan for the longer flight time, leaving the aircraft short of fuel.[2] As the aircraft neared Benghazi heavy fog blanketed the airport and the crew could not land the aircraft.[1] After failing to locate the alternate airport the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed during the crew's subsequent attempt to make an emergency landing, killing 59 passengers.[1]

References

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