UK Joins Wave of Countries Grounding 737 Max

The UK's
Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has banned the Boeing 737 MAX from operating in
or over UK airspace "as a precautionary measure".
The decision
comes after an Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed on Sunday, killing 157
people on board. It was the second fatal accident involving the 737 Max 8 model
in less than five months.
The UK joins
Singapore, China, Malaysia and Australia, in grounding the jets.
However, US
officials say the aircraft are still safe to fly.
In a move
that was welcomed by British pilots, the CAA said the directive would remain in
place until further notice.
Tui Airways
and Norwegian both operate the Boeing Max 8 in the UK as part of their fleets.
In a
statement, the CAA said it took the decision because it did not currently have
"sufficient information" from the flight data recorder about the
fatal crash.
A Tui
statement confirmed their 737 Max 8 aircraft were grounded.
"Any
customers due to fly home today on a 737 MAX 8 from their holiday will be flown
back on another aircraft," it read.
"Customers
due to travel in the coming days will also travel on holiday as planned on
other aircraft."
Norwegian
said it had also suspended flights of the aircraft and apologised for the
inconvenience to passengers.
The US
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has declared the 737 Max 8 airworthy.
But the
largest operator of 737 Max 8s in America, Southwest Airlines, is offering
passengers scheduled to fly on one of the Boeing planes the chance to change their
bookings.
Rival
American Airlines said its "standard policies for changes still
apply".
Boeing has
confirmed that for the past few months it has been developing a "flight
control software enhancement" for the aircraft.
In the
aftermath of the accident in Ethiopia, Singapore, China, Australia, South Korea
and Malaysia have all temporarily suspended the 737 Max.
Singapore's
Changi Airport is the world's sixth busiest and a major hub connecting Asia to
Europe and the US, but only a handful of airlines operate the Max 8 aircraft in
and out of the country.
No
Australian airlines operate the Boeing 737 Max, and only two foreign airlines -
SilkAir and Fiji Airways - fly the model into the country.
The Boeing
737 Max fleet of aircraft are the latest in the company's successful 737 line.
The group includes the Max 7, 8, 9 and 10 models.
By the end
of January, Boeing had delivered 350 of the Max 8 model out of 5,011 orders. A
small number of Max 9s are also operating.
The Max 7
and 10 models, not yet delivered, are due for roll-out in the next few years.
The Max 8
that crashed on Sunday was one of 30 ordered as part of Ethiopian Airlines'
expansion. It underwent a "rigorous first check maintenance" on
4 February, the airline said.
Following last
October's Lion Air crash in Indonesia, investigators said the pilots had
appeared to struggle with an automated system designed to keep the plane from
stalling, a new feature of the jet.
It
is not yet clear whether the anti-stall system was the cause of Sunday's crash.
Aviation experts say other technical issues or human error cannot be
discounted.
Eyewitnesses say they saw a trail of smoke, sparks and debris as
the plane nosedived.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-asia-
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