Pilot September 2017

(Martin Jones) #1
was the possibility of missile attack on
approach or departure. The previous year
an Ilyushin Il-76 had been struck shortly
after takeoff by a missile launched from a
small boat. A friend of ours had been on
board the aircraft at the time. The
Ilyushin, although badly damaged, landed
back safely. The following week a second
Il-76, which had brought engineers and
equipment to repair the first aircraft, was
hit by a missile. They were less fortunate.
This second Il-76 crashed killing all eleven
on board. Our friend had declined to
travel on the second flight, following a
premonition. A wrecked Il-76 was now in
a corner of the apron, a salient reminder of
the perils of Mogadishu.
We realised that the supposedly-safe
spiralling descent into Mogadishu actually
presented an easy target for the chaps with

O


ne of my worries about
operating into Mogadishu in
Somalia was that any one of
the airport workers might
suddenly explode or pull out a
weapon and attack us during our
turnarounds on the ground. It would be
easy to do and, since there had recently
been a gory and successful suicide attack
in the centre of the peacekeepers’ camp,
my concerns were realistic. Our preflight
inspections now involved carefully
checking the wheel-wells and the battery
compartments for bombs. At this time no
aircraft loitered at the airport; it wouldn’t
take long for mortars to be brought to bear.
I surreptitiously examined the aircraft
fueller, a weaselly, boss-eyed Somali, and
tried to peer inside his loose jacket,
checking for a suicide vest. “Captain, this


drum finished. You want more?” he asked.
Weasel stopped the rackety petrol-engine
water-pump that was the arrhythmic heart
of the dicey fuelling rig. I shook the drum
of Jet A-1 that was on the back of the
beaten-up pick-up truck to make sure it
was actually empty−it was normal to find
fuel remaining which would then be sold
in the market. “Yes please. Let’s add
another drum. And by the way,” I said,
gesturing at Madam who was preflighting
the PC-12, and whose flight suit epaulettes
carried four bars, versus my three, “She is
the Captain.” Weasel looked mortified; a
woman captain: how unnatural, how
ungodly! I straightened my back, looked
him in the eye and said, “But I am the
General.” Weasel looked most impressed.
Mogadishu was by turns concerning and
exhilarating. Sometimes both. One concern

Part five: We owned two Fujis now and were operating the Big Fella’s
Pilatus PC-12 into Somalia, but I still hadn’t got my licence

Words & Photos Tim Cooper

African Skies | Going solo


74 | Pilot September 2017 http://www.pilotweb.aero


Soldiers deploying at Magadishu
airport as an Il-18 transport arrives

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