Boeing 737 plane’s momentum was unstable 2 minutes into the flight

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Efforts of turning back time are being made while Boeing 737 max conducts investigations to unearth the reason behind the tragic Ethiopian plane crush that claimed all 157 passengers on board to try and prevent such an incident from going down again in the future.

Movement trace back reveals that before the Boeing 737 airplane took off from Bole International Airport in Addis Ababa, it had arrived from Johannesburg, South Africa.

Ethiopian authorities stated that upon landing,  the pilot had not made any remarks or concerns about the aircraft. 

Flight information from flightradar24

Three hours later it was scheduled to take off from the Bole en route to JKIA, Nairobi.

FlightRadar24, a Swedish website that tracks, origins and destinations, flight numbers, aircraft types, positions, altitudes, headings and speeds indicated that the plane’s momentum was unstable two minutes into the flight. 

The instability persisted for the next three minutes and the plane maintained an average altitude of 7,500 feet, with a speed of 600 knots (about 1,100km/h) before the tracking site lost its position.

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It is reported that Captain Yared Getachew informed the Ethiopian radar control about the difficulties and was cleared to turn back and land at Bole. 

Speaking during a press briefing in Addis Ababa, Ethiopian Airlines Group CEO Tewolde Gebre-Mariam indicated that the captain was a senior pilot and was equally experienced in flying the same plane since 2018 after joining the airline in 2010.

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