Snoozing air bosses draw fury

A passenger checks the information of flight departures at Beijing's international airport, China Monday, April 19, 2010. Several thousand air passengers were stranded in Asia for days as flights were grounded because of a massive cloud of ash from an Icelandic volcano that paralyzed European airports. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

A passenger checks the information of flight departures at Beijing's international airport, China Monday, April 19, 2010. Several thousand air passengers were stranded in Asia for days as flights were grounded because of a massive cloud of ash from an Icelandic volcano that paralyzed European airports. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

Published Aug 19, 2014

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Beijing - A Chinese aircraft was forced to delay its landing after two air traffic controllers nodded off, reports said on Tuesday, sparking a wave of online anger about airline safety.

The Boeing 737 was preparing to land at Wuhan Airport in central China but had no response from the air traffic control tower for 12 minutes, reports said.

Contact was eventually made and China Eastern Airlines Flight MU2528 from Sanya landed safely, the Sina.com news portal said.

“Because air traffic control was asleep on duty, (the plane) called many times,” civil aviation authorities said in a statement quoted by Chinese business magazine Caijing.

“But there was no reply, and no contact could be made with the control tower.”

A separate investigation report cited by Caijing said two controllers had fallen asleep.

The incident happened on July 8 and the statement was dated July 29. There was no explanation for the delay in making it public.

“Air control work is truly exhausting, but it is unforgivable to sleep on duty,” a post on Sina Weibo, China's version of Twitter, said on Tuesday.

“Hundreds of lives depend on the actions of flight tower controllers. We entrust our lives to you,” the post continued.

Another netizen added: “Such serious consequences. Should let him sleep as much as he wants in prison.” - Sapa-AFP

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