Black boxes that were recovered from the crashed Ugandan presidential helicopter that killed ex-Sudanese rebel chief and vice president John Garang will be taken to Russia for analysis, investigators have said.
Former Sudanese vice president Abel Alier, a member of the international team probing the crash, said late Friday that black boxes retrieved from Russian-built M1-172 chopper would be flown to Moscow for analysis where a report will be compiled and the boxes then returned to Uganda.
”A group composed of ourselves (Sudanese), Ugandans and Kenyans will accompany the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder retrieved from the helicopter debris to Russia,” Alier said, adding ”We are trying to get all the available information.”
Garang died on July 30 when Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s helicopter taking him back to southern Sudan from Uganda came down.
Most believe the accident was due to poor weather, darkness or possible pilot error.
But suspicion over the facts surrounding Garang’s death sparked violence between northern and southern Sudanese, leaving at least 130 people dead and prompting Khartoum to form a national committee to investigate the crash with international experts.
Dennis Jones, the US National Transportation Safety Board’s chief investigator, said it would take about five days to study the data boxes and estimated the crash investigation could take up to six months.
Broadly, the probe will focus on forensic, ballistics, recorders, operations, airworthiness, air-traffic control and weather, accident site survey, and security and intelligence, according to investigators.
In a separate development, Garang’s widow, Rebecca, who is visiting Uganda for the first time since her husband died, held talks with Museveni on Saturday, presidential spokesman Onapito Ekomoloit said.
”The president assured her (Rebecca) that the government and people of Uganda will continue to stand by her and the people of southern Sudan as it did when her husband was still leading them,” the spokesperson said.
Museveni told Garang’s six children ”to stand firm and emulate their late father whom he said was a principled man and great pan-Africanist,” Ekomoloit said.
The Ugandan leader openly backed Garang during the 21 years of war that Garang’s Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) waged against Khartoum over the alleged marginalisation of their region.
The war ended in January when SPLM/A signed a peace deal with Khartoum, putting a permanent stop to a conflict that claimed at least 1,5-million people and displaced more than four million others. – Sapa-AFP