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Pilot was untrained in fatal Clackmannanshire microlight crash

Earlier in the month, the BBC reported the results of an Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) report about a fatal microlight accident last April in Clackmannanshire. According to eyewitnesses, the 23-year-old Gemini Flash microlight entered into a steep climb shortly after take-off and then the nose dropped suddenly before it struck the ground – killing the pilot. The accident investigation revealed that:

In other words, it appears that a “pilot” was attempting a solo flight without undertaking the required flight training as no doubt he must have thought that flying was just like driving a vehicle or sailing a boat.

Gordon Douglas, the chief flying instructor and owner of East of Scotland Microlights, a microlight flight training school based at the East Fortune Airfield in East Lothian, had told the Daily Mail at the time the accident occurred that microlight accidents were “very rare.” However, anyone wishing to fly one in the UK still must have a proper pilot’s licence (along with some commonsense).

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