FLIGHT MU5735
China Eastern Airlines
by Winnie Han
Many aviation
experts called the incident odd.
So far, there
has been no official explanation for Zhang Zhengping’s demotion or why he was
on that flight as a first officer.
Everything
appeared normal except for the rank designation of the flight crew, mainly the
first officer.
Gao Fei is a Chinese-American pilot with 26 years of flying
experience and has a deep understanding of the culture and management in
China’s aviation industry. He has piloted Boeing aircraft in both China and the
United States, including the same model as the one that crashed.
On March 21, the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC)
confirmed a China Eastern Airlines flight MU5735 carrying 132 people crashed in
Wuzhou, Guangxi—southeast China. Five days later, on March 26, the Chinese
authorities said that all 123 passengers and nine crew members were killed in
the crash and that the two “black box” recorders were recovered on March 23 and
27, respectively, but in severely damaged condition.
Benjamin Berman
A former
National Transportation Safety Board investigator.
He said that the
737-800 is designed so that it will normally not dive at such steep angles.
Yang Hongda, the captain of the crashed plane, was 32 years old with a total flight time of 6,709 hours, while Zhang Zhengping, the first officer, was 59 years old with a total flight time of over 32,500 hours. Zhang was also a five-star captain and a recipient of the Chinese pilot’s Medal of Honor.
The culture of
the Chinese aviation industry, it is highly unusual for Zhang to still be
ranked as a first officer when he has flown over 32,500 hours and worked for
the same company his entire life. Furthermore, Yang was a student of Zhang.
December 2018
Zhang’s career,
he was 40-year veteran pilot and a mentor to young pilots. Zhang is one of the
few veteran pilots of China Eastern Yunnan Airlines and has piloted four
different types of aircraft.
Zhang is a “CAAC
designated check airman,” one of the
highest positions to be given to a pilot.
Li Ming, an old apprentice of Zhang, said he was shocked and
also saddened when he saw Zhang listed
as a first officer on the crew manifest.
Somehow Zhang
was demoted to a first officer, losing his decorated status and taking a
significant hit on his salary,” Gao said, suggesting a potential cause for
emotional distress and a safety hazard for the airline.
According to
public information, the average annual salary of a captain or a check airman in
China was at least $120,000, while a co-pilot’s average annual salary was about
$46,000, a drastic difference.
All information
regarding Zhang has now been removed from the official site.
Zhang was a
senior pilot of the former Yunnan Airlines, which was later forced into a
merger with China Eastern Airlines. After the merger, the former employees of
Yunnan Airlines, including Zhang, had a highly complex relationship with the
upper management of China Eastern Airlines.
Conflict between China Eastern Airlines and the Yunnan
Branch
Government-forced merger in 2002
Merging a
profitable company with a loss-making company was unprecedented.
Yunnan Airlines used to be one of China’s most profitable airline
companies, and its pilots were fairly well-treated. However, the pilots have
reportedly experienced significant salary cuts and poor treatment after the
merger.
From March 31 to April 1, 2008, pilots of the former Yunnan
Airlines launched a protest against the
newly merged company. Many pilots refused to land at their destinations
upon arrival, citing “bad weather,”
and flew their planes back to their origins. After 21 flights refused to land,
the company punished 13 pilots and
grounded one captain. The report did not mention whether the company has
improved its treatment of employees after the protest.
PSYCHOLOGIC CREW STATUS - DISTRESS
Demotion of a
decorated pilot without a reasonable cause could seriously affect the pilot’s
mental state and pose a safety hazard.
“In a free
world, with Zhang’s qualifications, any airline will offer him a high salary. In
the United States, pilots can easily change jobs, but job changes in China are
highly restricted and usually coupled with huge fines,” said Gao.
Chinese pilots
who apply for job changes usually have to go through a lengthy litigation
process without guarantee of success or are forced to hand back a massive
portion of their compensation.
In November 2014, 42 airlines in China signed the “Convention on the Orderly Flow of Airline
Pilots,” a pact that stipulates that the outflow rate of pilots from each
company should not exceed 1 percent.
In 2017, (name preserved)
a former pilot of China Eastern Airlines’ Yunnan Branch, was sued by China
Eastern Airlines for $864,000 due to his resignation request. In June 2019, the court ordered him to
compensate China Eastern Airlines $604,800.
“The pilot’s
mental state is an important aspect of the incident investigation. I analyzed
it from the perspective of the [flight] crew’s designation. I hope the Chinese
authorities can disclose the real investigation results and provide a
reasonable explanation instead of [covering up facts],” Gao added.
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