Small plane crash in Romania unleashes public ire
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — A small plane crash on a remote mountain wouldn’t normally be enough to anger an entire country or threaten the Government. Romania, however, is dealing with just this scenario.
So far, four senior officials including the interior minister have resigned or been fired after all those on-board a medical flight initially survived Monday’s crash in thick fog. One of the pilots and a medical student later died of hypothermia among other causes after waiting for hours in deep snow to be saved.
Romanians reacted with fury, taking to social media and talk shows to accuse the Government of incompetence and complacency after it emerged the least injured of the survivors called emergency services six times.
It took 4 1/2 hours for local villagers and a woodcutter to locate the plane in Transylvania after it lost altitude and crashed at 1,400 metres (4,600 feet) above sea level. But medical teams arrived hours later and were reportedly ill-equipped. The plane, carrying two pilots and five medical workers, was on its way to pick up a liver for a transplant.
“The government generally does nothing, and in this case they did nothing to locate the plane. A woodcutter had to find them,” aviation professor Nicolae Serban Tomescu said. “The rescue operation was like Swiss cheese. There were holes everywhere.”
But some officials have defended the government’s response to the crash, saying rescuers were working in difficult weather conditions and in darkness.
Nonetheless, public ire has reached a crescendo because many believe the government was unable to muster up-to-date equipment to rescue the crash victims, but is willing to invest its resources heavily on surveillance. Romania, a country of 19 million with no foreign enemies, has seven intelligence agencies, including the main domestic and foreign spying agencies. Democracy activists claim that those in power use intelligence to gain unfair advantages over opponents and dig up compromising data.