Toolbox

- occupants presumed deada
With no sighting after two weeks, Transport and Hydraulics Robeson Benn yesterday called off a search and rescue mission for a missing US charter plane, saying its three passengers are presumed dead.

James Wesley Barker

James Wesley Barker

Benn, who said it was a difficult decision to make, told a press conference that it was futile to continue the search after 15 days with no sign of the three men who were aboard the Beach King Aircraft. Americans James Wesley Barker, 28, and Chris Paris, 23, the Captain and First Officer, respectively, along with Canadian Patrick Murphy, a geophysics technician were on board the plane. The aircraft was chartered from Dynamic Aviation Inc by Terraquest Ltd to conduct geophysical surveys on behalf of Prometheus Resources (Guyana) Inc, a subsidiary of the Toronto-based U3O8 Corporation. The aircraft was scheduled to operate in the Chi Chi – Imbaimadai area located in Cuyuni and following four hours, thirty minutes in the area it was expected to return to the Cheddi Jagan International Airport.

“As difficult as it may seem we have done everything that we could do or that we can possible do… We have expended all the resources, the time and the effort that we could at this stage of the game [and]…until anything else happens we have concluded that the aircraft and its occupants are lost,” Benn said. “We are calling off the search… We presume that the aircraft and its occupants, that there has been a crash and both the aircraft and its occupants are presumed lost.” According to him, the men “perished” and the authorities are not in the position to recover them. “We have no specific knowledge of their whereabouts,” he said.
However, Benn said the companies plan to continue limited search operations in the area where the aircraft went missing, using residents and persons who know the area.

 Chris Paris

Chris Paris

Faced with criticism that the search and rescue operation may have been put into motion much too late after the last contact with the aircraft on November 1, Benn said that there was no way aircraft could have flown into the area the same day because of the bad weather and the terrain. The minister described the operation as the “most intensive and sophisticated search for any aircraft missing in Guyana.”

Head of the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) Zulfikar Mohammed also told the media that immediately after contact was lost with the aircraft, personnel from the authority, the Guyana Defence Force (GDF), British military, Terraquest and local aircraft operators begun planning for the search and rescue mission. “The two British Lynx helicopters, a fixed wing aircraft and GDF Special forces were put on standby; however due to the lack of the ELT [Emergency Locator Transmitter] signal being received, terrain, a poor weather report in that area and other logistics it was considered unsafe to a launch a search on the night of the 1st of November,” Mohammed said.

On the first day of the search, eight aircraft were used, with six the following day but after nine days of intense aerial search using specialised equipment nothing positive was found. The search continued with more emphasis on ground searches in specified areas and limited aerial search by a Dynamic Aviation King Air to gather areas of interest for forensic analysis.

Mohammed said it was after some 200 hours and 28,260 miles of aerial searching with no sighting of the plane, it was decided that the search will continue using ground patrols only. He said in addition to the search conducted by the aerial and ground parties the police and the Special Forces were also checking on any reports made by residents in the area.

Benn said that during the search imaging techniques were used with the support of the company which owns the aircraft. There is a complete acquisition of photograph record in the area and that record is being analysed locally and in the United States for information for future operations.  While saying it is distressing that they have been unable to locate the aircraft or its occupants, Benn sought to assure the public, the organisations concerned and the families of the missing men, “that we have, both the Civil Aviation Authority [CAA] and the government of Guyana, that we have done everything that we could under the circumstances and that our thoughts and hopes and best wishes are with them.”

Fending off the criticism, Benn said the search procedures Guyana signed onto with the International Civil Aviation Organisation were followed. He pointed out that the aircraft was equipped with a special satellite tracking system, which is subscribed to by the company that owns it and it sends of a signal every half an hour. He said the aircraft flew at 150 miles an hour, or two miles a minute, so in the period it was not heard from it could have flown quite a few miles.

He said while they had planes on standby to fly out in the area on the day it lost contact, because of the weather it would have been “unconscionable at that time, our knowing the terrain in which they had to fly, the time of the day [to allow them to fly.]” The minister pointed out that sunset is now at 5:30 pm and on escarpment in the area the actual sunset below there will be much earlier. “For those persons in the GDF air wing and for those other persons in the British military who themselves or otherwise were prepared to sacrifice themselves… it would have been the wrong thing in any event to have attempted that in the absence of any fixed [location] to go out to investigate.”

He stressed the mission faced tremendous difficulty without a firm location and no access to the area because of the weather. He said there were times when the helicopters were flying over the area and could not see the ground because of the weather. By 9:15 the following the morning, the search aircraft were flying over the area. By the same evening two aircraft that were coming out of the location were asked to make radio contacts as they flew over the general area where the aircraft would have gone missing.

However, Benn said “everything we can do can be done better, particularly in hindsight,” but he stressed again that international procedures were followed. “The fact of the matter is Guyana’s terrain in that area is what it is and we can’t change it…. It is possible that the plane could have crashed against the escarpment and tumbled amongst the large boulders and tress at the bottom and covered…” he said.

Meanwhile, Benn revealed that a draft search and rescue policy document is in the pipeline and it involves not only aircraft search and rescue but maritime search and rescue with the intention or forming an organisation or body which coordinates such operations.  He said that the CAA authority and the Maritime Administration are in the process of perusing the document.

But he added that in respect to aircraft search and rescue he does not see how it could have been done other than the way it was done during the search for the missing aircraft. The minister said while any “useful criticism” will be welcomed, “I don’t think it would help anybody for people to go off and say they are setting up their own search and rescue thing, particularly at the aviation level. Obviously it would have to be brought into the particular normal framework and that framework which normally works.”

Related Articles


You can follow responses to this article through its RSS feed.

Subscribe to our electronic edition or get home delivery!


Reader Comments

You can discuss this and other articles in our new community forums!


  1. alan NETHERLANDS ANTILLES says:

    i flew that area many times.it is “horrible” terrain.when weather closes in there is no visibility and a/craft have to navigate between a lot of hills and mountains.the gcaa should have not allow a high speed a/craft to operate in those areas in the first place and with unexperienced ppl.guyana have a fleet of 206 and islanders could have done that -and now they are calling off the search-kinda sad.

  2. Varsha UNITED STATES says:

    I for one am holding out hope that those young fellows are alive and well, in the jungle or whereever, surviving on roots, fruits and whatever else one eats to survice under those dire circumstance.

    These smart men are probably trekking their way using to civilization as we speak using all sorts methods – a map they have salvaged, perhaps even a compass, sense of direction and most of all survival instincts.

    There is hope, and they are prayers. Let us pray, please.

    On a slightly differentnote,the Canadain and AMerican Gov, as well as these gentleme’s respective company they were working for should send in rescue team, to aid in their journey back to us.

  3. alan NETHERLANDS ANTILLES says:

    i agree with mark simon.the venezuelians are shooting missiles regularly into guyana forest with f16.we cannot see the a/craft but we hear them and the explosion.the f16 is faster than sound(supersonic).or the a/craft can be intercepted by venezuela because of its equipment.

  4. GodsGirl UNITED STATES says:

    Mr. Benn -

    In Jesus Name….please do not quit looking. They are alive. They need you to find them.

    • true guyanese UNITED STATES says:

      it is indeed sad…but why should the guyanese people foot the resources and bills to continue search for these men……when the sugar workers disappare…in 2006….there was not so much cry to continue…in a small area….but hear are foreigners and we try to prove to the world we care ,,,and don’t even care for our own…

  5. Rovin toronto. CANADA says:

    I’m not sure the aircraft went down, it could be that the aircraft left guyana. If the aircraft did go down we should have found it. I took part in the search of Captain Miles an Gerry , the team in Guyana does a very good job I’m sure they did . However if the missing a/c went down in guyana then I’m very sorry my prayers are with every one.
    I hope that these flights will have a local pilot from today who know the area an the weather very well.

  6. mike j UNITED STATES says:

    The US government is involved. Read the daily news journal (www.dnj.com). I have no idea whether the Canadians are involved. One of my friends in on board. The search was called off to save face because the govt search was slowing down the native peoples search group and that of the others involved. Private aircraft ares till searching. Trust me, my sources are reliable as they come from peopled directly involved and NOT from Guyana.

  7. Flyer UNITED STATES says:

    My prayers are with the families of the missing crew members.

    I think the criticism of the government search parties is partially misplaced. They cannot be totally responsible for aircraft flying in remote areas. Who IS totally responsible is the company who sent the aircraft there.

    What kind of jungle survival kit was the crew provided? Were the maps they got up to date? are there even good maps of that area? Why is the Emergency Locator Transmitter not going off? What was the companies plan in case of loss of contact with aircraft? Why are the satellite updates only every 30 min? Were more closely spaced updates available and for how much more money? Also does this tracking work if they were intercepted, forced to turn transponder/or ELT off and forced to some remote jungle landing strip? In another country?

    Articles I have read focus on what the governments are doing but the governments did not send this aircraft to the area. I want to know what is being done by those who did send it. I think the governments have a responsibility to end the search at some point in time and the company who sent the aircraft has a responsibility to search until this crew is found.

  8. Milowills UNITED STATES says:

    it seems as though the Search was mis managed from day one. I have found every Aircraft that went down between 1987 and 2000 within hours after the Accidents. getting to the Area of high probability as soon as possible is extremely important. A search was not initiated until late morning the next day. The Kingair Aircraft used also are not suitable for Search and rescue.

  9. Mary Smith UNITED STATES says:

    My son works for Dynamic Avaition also my heart goes out to all the families involved and my thoughts and prayers go out to you to and I truly feel they will be found alive this has also been hard on the employees at Dynamic, Wes is a friend of my son’s and I know if he could he would be there searching also.. Mary

  10. alan rankin UNITED KINGDOM says:

    I know chris personally. It’s horrible to think of how young he was.. My prayers are with his family.



Comments Page 3 of 3« Prev123

Leave a Reply

About Comments



The Comments section of this website is intended to provide a forum for reasoned and reasonable debate on the newspaper's content and is an extension of the newspaper and what it has become well known for over its history: accuracy, balance and fairness.

We reserve the right to edit/delete comments which contain attacks on other users, slander, coarse language and profanity, and gratuitous and incendiary references to race and ethnicity.

Curious about the little images next to each commenter's name ? Go here and sign up using the same email address you used to register for Stabroeknews.com then upload your image and confirm it.

More articles in Local News