Kegworth disaster anniversary commemorated

Survivors and families of some of the 47 people killed in the Kegworth air disaster have attended a church service and wreath-laying ceremony to mark 30 years since the tragedy.

The British Midland Boeing 737 was travelling to Belfast when it suffered engine trouble and came down on an embankment on the M1 in 1989.

Wreaths were laid by families, emergency services, councils and others at a memorial site in the Leicestershire village on Tuesday. Before the wreath-laying, the names of those who died were read out during a 45-minute church service, followed by a minute’s silence.

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Around 300 people attended the service, which was led by Reverend Lauretta Wilson, during which hymns were sung, prayers were read and candles were lit. Some of those who had flown from Northern Ireland to attend the commemorations wiped away tears as people paid their respects.

Opening the commemorations, Rev Wilson said: “Kegworth has never forgotten that fateful night on January 8 1989. Whatever our motivations, it is good to have the opportunity to remember and honour those who lost their lives.

The plane, with 126 people on board, had taken off from Heathrow just before 8pm on January 8. Loud bangs were heard coming from the left-hand engine as an evening meal was being served to the 118 passengers.

But Captain Kevin Hunt and his co-pilot, David McClelland, shut down the correctly-working right-hand engine and efforts to make an emergency landing at East Midlands Airport failed.

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Instead, the plane, which was on fire and had blazing debris dropping from it, came down on the M1 embankment with the runway at East Midlands Airport only a few hundred yards away.

Despite the crash, nobody on the ground was injured and some of the passengers were able to walk away unscathed. Most of the deaths occurred at the front of the plane but 79 people, including the two pilots, survived.

Speaking following yesterday’s anniversary commemoration, a survivor from Co Armagh said he did not know if he was alive or dead in the moments after the crash.

Killylea man Leslie Bloomer told the Press Association he was not even supposed to be on that flight to Belfast.

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The 57-year-old had visited a boat show in London with two friends, with one suggesting they got an earlier flight home after arriving at the airport three hours early.

Yesterday, Mr Bloomer said he was shaking before his flight from Northern Ireland took off and admitted flying was “still tough for me”.

He said: “When I got on the plane in Belfast, and when it got on to the runway – if they’d have opened the door and said ‘Do you want to get out?’, I’d have got out. I was sitting there just shaking. Flying is still tough for me but I’m very glad to come here.”

Speaking of the events leading up to the flight, Mr Bloomer said: “We shouldn’t even have been on that plane, we were booked on the 9.20pm plane but my friend said to me ... ‘We’re going to be here for another three hours, I wonder if we could get an earlier flight home?’ There was room on the 7.20pm so we jumped on it.”

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