HP-312
Flight / Schedule
HP-312
Aircraft
Curtiss C-46 CommandoRegistration
HP-312
MSN
33381
Year of Manufacture
1945
Operator
Aerovias Panama Airways - APASADate
January 11, 1962 at 12:00 AM
Type
CRASHFlight Type
Scheduled Revenue Flight
Flight Phase
Flight
Crash Site
Plain, Valley
Crash Location
Maniamuna Katanga
Region
Africa • Democratic Republic of Congo
Crash Cause
Terrorism act, Hijacking, Sabotage
Narrative Report
On January 11, 1962 at 12:00 AM, HP-312 experienced a crash involving Curtiss C-46 Commando, operated by Aerovias Panama Airways - APASA, with the event recorded near Maniamuna Katanga.
The flight was categorized as scheduled revenue flight and the reported phase was flight at a plain, valley crash site.
0 people were known to be on board, 0 fatalities were recorded, 0 survivors were identified or estimated.
Crew on board: 0, crew fatalities: 0, passengers on board: 0, passenger fatalities: 0, other fatalities: 0.
The listed crash cause is terrorism act, hijacking, sabotage. En route, hijackers forced the crew to land in a remote area located in the region of Maniamuna, Katanga. The landing was completed properly and all occupants evacuated safely but the aircraft was set on fire by the hijackers and destroyed.
Aircraft reference details include registration HP-312, MSN 33381, year of manufacture 1945.
Fatalities
Total
0
Crew
0
Passengers
0
Other
0
Crash Summary
En route, hijackers forced the crew to land in a remote area located in the region of Maniamuna, Katanga. The landing was completed properly and all occupants evacuated safely but the aircraft was set on fire by the hijackers and destroyed.
Cause: Terrorism act, Hijacking, Sabotage
Occupants & Outcome
Crew On Board
0
Passengers On Board
0
Estimated Survivors
0
Fatality Rate
—
Known people on board: 0
Operational Details
Operator
Aerovias Panama Airways - APASAFlight Type
Scheduled Revenue Flight
Flight Phase
Flight
Crash Site
Plain, Valley
Region / Country
Africa • Democratic Republic of Congo
Aircraft Details
Similar Plane Crashes
Eugène de Ligne
Aviméta 92
The aircraft was performing a flight from Albertville to Uvira with a crew of three on board. While cruising along the Tanganyika Lake, the crew encountered very bad weather conditions with thunderstorm activity, unfavorable winds, heavy rain falls and turbulences. The crew attempted an emergency landing when the aircraft crashed near the Burton Bay, near Kibanga, south of Baraka, Sud-Kivu. Both pilots were killed while the mechanic was seriously injured. Crew: Edmond Thieffry, pilot, Gaston Julien, pilot, Eugène Gastuche, mechanic.
Société Générale Aéronautique
Farman F.190
The crew departed Algiers on 13DEC1929 bound for Antananarivo where he arrived on 01JAN1930. On 10JAN1930, the crew departed Antananarivo for his back trip to Paris, with intermediate stops in Quelimane and Elizabethville. Few minutes after its departure from Port-Francqui, the aircraft crashed in the jungle near Dibaya, Kasai. The wreckage and the dead bodies of the crew members were found on 13MAR1930 in an isolated area. Crew: Léopold Roux, pilot, Raymond Caillol, radio, Eric Dodemont, mechanic.
SABENA - Société Anonyme Belge d'Exploitation de la Navigation Aérienne
De Havilland DH.50
The aircraft departed Elisabethville on a flight to Luluabourg with an intermediate stop in Bukama, carrying five passengers and two crew members. The crew initiated the takeoff procedure from a water logged runway. After a course of about 900 metres, the airplane overran and crashed against rocks. All five passengers and the flight mechanic escaped uninjured while the pilot Henri Van Reempst was killed after being wedged between his seat and the steering wheel.
Carl Nauer
De Havilland DH.80 Puss Moth
The pilot was attempting a world record from Cape Town to Croydon. While flying over the delta of the Congo River, the single engine aircraft crashed in unknown circumstances off Muanda, Bas Congo. The pilot was killed.
SABENA - Société Anonyme Belge d'Exploitation de la Navigation Aérienne
Sabca F7
En route, the right engine failed, forcing the crew to attempt an emergency landing. On touch down, the aircraft lost its undercarriage and slid several yards before coming to rest. While all occupants were unhurt, the aircraft was dismantled and towed to the nearest airfield but eventually, it was considered as damaged beyond repair and never flew again.
Air Afrique
Bloch MB.120
While approaching the city of Coquilhatville (now Mbandaka) from the north, the three engine aircraft crashed in unknown circumstances on an island located on the River Congo, some 40 km north of Coquilhatville. All three crew were rescued while the aircraft was lost.
