Captain
Peter Waxtan, the American pilot who flew the ill-fated Dana plane on
Sunday, was on his last flight and last day in Nigeria before returning
to his country, friends and former colleagues said.
A
former pilot for Miramar-based Spirit Airlines, Waxtan resumed work
with Dana Air in March 2012, Oscar Wason, the airline’s director of
operations said.
In all, Waxtan had flown Dana planes for 30 days
and was off duty for 15 days, Pat Squires, a pilot who worked with him
for 15 years told Sun Sentinel newspaper in the United States, adding
that he was to return on Sunday (3 June), the same day the Dana flight
992 crashed in Lagos, southwest Nigeria, killing 152 people on board and
at least 10 others on the ground.
Squire added that Waxtan was
eager to return to the US and spend time with Lisa, his fiancée. The
55-year old pilot was to have arrived his Fort Lauderdale home on
Wednesday (today), he said.
The American pilot worked at Spirit
from 1997 to 2009 before his contract and that of Squires, his
colleague, were terminated during union negotiations with the airline.
“It
was a political thing,” Squires said, which occurred during union
negotiations with the airline. Both men then flew for Falcon Air
Express, a Miami-based charter service.
Last year they both departed Falcon. Waxtan later joined Dana Air, where he worked 30 days on and 15 off, Squires said.
“Sunday was supposed to be his last day in the rotation in Nigeria,” he said.
Waxtan
lived with Lisa, his fiancee, who through a friend declined to give her
last name. “He spent as much time as he could get with her,” Squires
said.
“It’s just so devastating,” said a Coral Springs flight
attendant who knew Waxtan. “He was a good guy, he was one of my
favorites,” Springs told Sun Sentinel newspaper.
Flight 992 was
few kilometers on its final approach to the Lagos airport when Waxtan
declared an emergency. Witnesses said it appeared the plane was having
engine trouble, Wason said.
The jetliner crashed into a two-storey railway building, hitting the ground tail first and exploding in flames.
Squires
described his friend as a “consummate professional” at flying. “He was
the best MD-80 captain I’ve ever seen,” said Squires, formerly of
Broward County and now of Phoenix.
Squires said crash photos
showing Flight 992 on the ground with it nose up indicates Waxtan was
trying to keep it in the air right until the end.
“He did
everything he could to save that aircraft,” Squires said. “In the end,
if he knew it was going down, he did everything he could to minimize the
amount of damage on the ground.”“If nothing else, his efforts were
heroic.”
Three other friends, flight attendants or other workers
at Spirit Airlines, described Waxtan as a “genuine nice guy” who was
quick with a smile or a joke. They asked that their names not be used,
however, because officials at Spirit have prohibited employees from
speaking about their lost friend.
Squires said Waxtan was a former
Army helicopter pilot who enjoyed hiking. About three weeks ago, the
two men spoke. “He was very happy, he kept telling me, ‘We need
captains, come on over,’ “ Squires recalled.
“I’m still in shock,” said the friend, his voice breaking. “God, I’m going to miss him.”, the Sun Sentinel reported.
At
the Dana Air Accident Information Centre at the Murtala Muhammed
Airport 2, very few relatives showed up to identify their loved ones and
inside the terminal building, there were only few passengers.
Dana
passengers scurried to their airline’s counter for refund. Efforts to
get the names of other members of Dana crew proved abortive as their
colleagues refused to talk, to say what they remember about their
departed colleagues.
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