top of page

Fact-Check

Facts & Reports

All Post:      Latest Updates

Misinformation and Disinformation

Propaganda and Conspiracy

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp

Did you know at least 82 people died in different plane crashes since South Sudan’s independence

  • May 6, 2021
  • 2 min read

Author: Garang Abraham – Managing Editor

At least eighty-two people have died in different plane crashes since South Sudan succeeded from Sudan nine years ago, according to Aviation Safety Network.  

As per the data obtained by 211 Check, the biggest incident that claimed 41 lives happened near Juba International Airport, Central Equatoria State on November 4, 2015, when Allied Services Limited – lsf Asia Airways crashed while taking off.   

The second incident which claimed numerous lives occurred on September 9, 2018 in Lakes State, near Yirol airstrip, when South West Aviation, lsf Slav-Air crashed while landing – a heartbreaking occurrence that left 20 people dead including a bishop.   

Other crashes that killed several people include the recent South Supreme Airlines Pieri and last year’s South West Aviation incidences, where 10 and 7 people died respectively.  

The above data also shows that Central Equatoria State, Juba City registered the biggest number of incidences that claimed several lives.

Wau Airport scoped the second position of the airstrips that registered several incidences, though the number of passengers killed was less.

According to the data, there were few survivors from all the crashes. However, most of the occurrences were incident-related. There were no hijacking or criminal related incidences in all the cases.

Note: The analysis identified that the government or concerned authorities didn’t make investigations or findings of most the incidences public, apart from few.

IATA neglected call

On February 8, 2021, the International Air Transport Association in a letter encouraged South Sudan’s Civil Aviation Authorities to ensure that the desired level of safety and efficiency is implemented in the lower airspace.  

The association stressed that many interventions have not resulted in a clear improvement in safety performance.

In addition, the aviation body claimed that Juba is considered a challenging operational environment due to the following reported deficiencies:

  • Air Traffic Services.

  • Industrial action by civilian air traffic service personnel.

  • Deployment of military air traffic controllers to replace civilian personnel.

  • RNAV/GNSS approach procedures are deficient. Previous procedures were cancelled and are no longer valid.

  • Frequency congestion as a result of combined Ground, Tower and Approach control services on a single frequency.

IATA recommended that airlines operating within the South Sudan Airspace at a minimum should: –

1.Treat the operation as specialized, and continue to exercise robust risk management practices pertaining to the operation.

2.Ensure crews are well briefed of the above challenges.

3.Operators should continue reporting issues/concerns in the above airspace using safety reporting mechanisms and, where applicable, the IATA GADM IDX program.

But the call seems to have gone in vain or authorities might be implementing the appeal undercover.

Below are three graphs summarizing the above data…..

END

Comments


Fact-Checking & Information Verification In South Sudan

211 Check is South Sudan's first and only independent fact-checking and information verification flagship project established by Defyhatenow in March 2020 to counter COVID-19 dis/misinformation but has since grown in its scope of work. It became a signatory of the International Fact-checking Network's (IFCN) Code of Principles in March 2023.


If you believe that 211 Check is violating the IFCN Code of Principles, you can report this through the complaints page on the IFCN site.

CONNECT

Contact Us

3D08A7CE-F703-8E75-79BE-C288B81D6B70.png

FOLLOW US

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp

© Copyright 211CHECK 2025. All Rights Reserved

bottom of page