- Gameel Al-Batouti
Gameel Al-Batouti Arabic: جميل البطوطي (also rendered "Gamil ElBatouty" or "El Batouty" in U.S. official reports) (
February 2 ,1940 –October 31 ,1999 ) was a pilot forEgyptAir , his home country's national airline, and a former officer for theEgyptian Air Force . All 217 aboard were killed whenEgyptAir Flight 990 crashed into theAtlantic Ocean 60 miles SE ofNantucket Island ,Massachusetts , onOctober 31 ,1999 . TheNTSB concluded that the probable cause of the crash was a series of control inputs made by Al-Batouti. [http://www.ntsb.gov/Pressrel/2002/020321.htm NTSB press release,March 21 , 2002, accessedApril 28 ,2007 ] ]Family and personal life
Al-Batouti came from a socially elite family in
Egypt . His father was a mayor and a landowner and family members were well educated and affluent.Al-Batouti was married and had five children. The youngest, Aya, who was ten at the time of the crash, suffered from lupus, and was undergoing medical treatment in
Los Angeles . Efforts had been made at EgyptAir, both at a company level and at an employee level to provide assistance to help defray the medical expenses. [http://www.ntsb.gov/events/ea990/docket/Ex_2A.pdf NTSB "Operational Factors Group Chairman's Factual Report",January 18 , 2000] ]Al-Batouti was approaching retirement (aviation regulations prevented him from flying as a commercial airline pilot after age 60), and had planned to split his time between a 10-bedroom villa outside of
Cairo and a beach house near El Alamin.Career
Al-Batouti had been drafted into the Egyptian army, where he was trained as a pilot and flight instructor. He then worked for a time as an instructor at the Egyptian Air Institute. His position there was described by one colleague as "high profile".
While in the Army, Al-Batouti served as a pilot in both the 1967
Six-Day War and the 1973Yom Kippur War . [http://web.archive.org/web/20040607134321/http://www.cairotimes.com/news/batfam.html "Batouty clan stands united", "Cairo Times", archived at archive.org, accessed April 29, 2007] ]Batouti hired on with EgyptAir on September 8, 1987. He held type ratings for the Boeing 737-200, Boeing 767-200 and the 767-300. At the time of the crash, he had logged 12,538 hours of flight time, with 5,755 as
pilot in command and 5,191 in the 767.At the time of his death, Al-Batouti was the most senior
first officer (F/O) flying the 767 at EgyptAir. He was not promoted tocaptain because he declined to sit for the exam for hisAirline Transport Pilot Licence (ATPL) rating. The ATPL study materials and exam are conducted in English (the international language of aviation), and Al-Batouti did not have sufficient English proficiency. Once he reached 55, the possibility of promotion was further hindered by EgyptAir policy which prevented promotions after that age. According to statements made by his colleagues to the NTSB during the Flight 990 investigation, he did not want to be promoted, because as senior F/O, he could get his preferred flight schedules, which assisted in his family situation. Despite not being promoted to captain, he was often referred to by that title because of his previous experience at the Egypt Air Institute.Flight 990
Batouti was the
co-pilot that theNational Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) suspected of deliberately crashing Flight 990 into the ocean, an assertion denied by Egyptian authorities. According to the NTSB, Batouti seized the plane's controls and turned off theautopilot after the captain left the cockpit. He then led the plane into adive , continually repeating, "I rely on God". The pilot then came back into the cockpit, tried to stop the dive, but could not prevent the plane from crashing into the ocean.Some investigators learned that he was supposedly reprimanded for inappropriate behavior with female guests at the
Hotel Pennsylvania , aNew York City hotel often used by EgyptAir crews. Hatem Roushdy, an EgyptAir official said to be responsible for the alleged reprimand was a passenger on Flight 990. The details of the reprimand included the removal of Gameel Al-Batouti's privilege of flying any flight to the United States, and that Flight 990 would be his last."Mayday", Season 3, episode 8 ("Death and Denial", also simply called "EgyptAir 990")]There was western media speculation that Batouti may have been a terrorist; his family and friends indicated that he had no strong political beliefs.
The
Egyptian Civil Aviation Authority disputes the cause of the crash, blaming technical problems, rather than any action of Al-Batouti. [http://www.ntsb.gov/events/ea990/docket/ecaa_report.pdf ECAA final report] ]References
External links
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20000303092021/http://www.cairotimes.com/news/batouti.html Cairo Times: Suicide Speculation Under Fire (Available through Archive.Org)]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20040607134321/http://www.cairotimes.com/news/batfam.html Cairo Times: Batouti Family Defends Co-pilot (Available through Archive.Org)]
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