Taiwanese F-5E fighter jets in fatal collision

By Michael Cheng 3 Min Read

Taiwan Air Force is facing another accident. Two Taiwan Air Force F-5E fighter jets collided and crashed into the ocean. This is the second accident in less than six months and the eight severe accident involving F-5E fighter jets in the past 20 years. The previous F-5E crash occurred during a training mission after an engine failure,  the aircraft’s pilot, Captain Chu Kuan-meng, died in the crash, which occurred last October

The Ministry of National Defence (MND) provided information on the incident. “At 14:30 (0630z), a total of 4 F-5e took off from Taitung Air Base on a training mission. The ATC received a collision report of 2 jets at 15:06 (0706z), two planes lost contact from the radar screen from ( Coor: N22.11.40. E120.55.00), approximately near 38 nm southeast of the base.

The Last location detected on radar scope before two aircrafts went missing.
The Last location detected on radar scope before two aircraft went missing. ( NRCC Photo)

The Search & Rescue mission has immediately dispatched. Black Hawk helicopters and maritime patrol boats scrambled to the accident site. A search zone is 1.4 nautical miles offshore has been located from the Xuhai Fishing Harbour.”

Firefighters and search & Rescue agents have also been sent to carry out an onshore search. At 16:14 (08:14z), local police found an ejected seat and parachute at the Provincial Highway 26, but no casualty was located nearby. Ten minutes later, First Lieutenant Lo was found in the sea unconscious and then transferred to the Hospital. Despite having vital signs upon discovery, the 26 years old later died at 17:45 (0945z), leaving behind his young fiancée.

The picture of the two missing airplanes. No. 5286 and 5287. ( From ROC MND Facebook Page,)

The other pilot, Captain Pan, is still missing. Two vessels and a crew of 16 people from the Coast guard are searching the accident area. According to the latest weather report, the accident site’s water wave is about 3 to 4 meters. The estimated wind speed is about 52-75km/h, with gusting of 88-103km/h, increasing the difficulty of search and rescue.

This is a developing story and we will bring you further updates as more information becomes known.

Pan’s seat, with part of the parachute, still attached. (NRCC photo)
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Aviation Reporter - Based in Hong Kong, Michael is an Aviation Journalist here at Travel Radar, covering industry insights across Asia as well as international technical development within the industry. With the solid experience in airline ground operations, Michael is currently a Quality Assurance and Compliance Monitoring Officer with a large ground-operations company. In his spare time, Michael is an avid flight-simulation fan, serving in a senior marketing role for a large multiplayer server. Alongside this, he makes regular appearances at workshops and conferences across the aviation industry
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