After he retired, no one would have remembered him. Now everyone remembers him for all the wrong reasons.
We don’t know if it played any role.but
I noticed a couple of things. Hopefully, the final report will touch upon them.
- the senior officials were fired for “poor crew safety measurement” and “violation of the scheduling protocol”. They also commented on “licensing lapses” or such.
1) The statement begs the question, how were the relationships between Sabharwal and Kunder? Any prior problems? Did “violation of scheduling protocol” mean that they should not have been scheduled to fly together because of some character mismatch? (It had happened before, in China Eastern Airlines Flight 5735 crash and SilkAir Flight 185 crash.
2) Did licensing lapses mean that something was wrong in Capt Sabharwal’s medical or flight certificate but they allowed him to fly?
3) A different question. In several cases, the pattern is the same, a person with “issues” has a traumatic episode the day before the flight. The cases include:
Gameel Al-Batouti, suicidal FO on board Egyptian 990. The night before the flight, Al-Batouti was reprimanded for harassing a female flight attendant in the hotel; the woman asked the company’s manager Roushdy for protection. Just before the flight, Roushdy revoked Al-Batouti's privilege of flying to the United States and informed him that Flight 990 would be his last on the route. Roushdy was the passenger on 990.
Also, SilkAir Flight 185 captain Tsu Way Ming, considered responsible for the crash - loss of $1.2 million shortly before the crash and suspension of his securities-trading privileges 10 days before the accident.
MH 370 flight - imprisonment of Shah’s in-law, friend and “political hope” of the country the day before the flight.
Lubitz, Germanwings flight 9525 crash. Lubitz’s live-in girlfriend, tired of his controlling personality, broke up with him the day before the flight.
In hindsight, none of these people should have been scheduled to fly the next day (Ming’s and Lubitz’s situations were unknown of, though).
So the question is, was there any personal trauma/break in Sabharwal’s life the days prior to the flight? Was it known and not reflected in “scheduling”?
5) As it now seems, Captain Subharwal was a good actor till the very end. He definitely played an amazing son. That invites another question, what was his real life story?