Chinook Helicopter Crash
Faulty computer software and not pilot error could have led to a Chinook helicopter crash which killed 25 of Britain's top intelligence experts, new evidence suggests.
The software was "positively dangerous" according to an internal Ministry of Defence document written nine months before the 1994 crash and obtained by the BBC.
The BBC claimed there were serious concerns in the engine control computer software flagged up in the report written by experts working for the MoD's aircraft testing centre at Boscombe Down.
Deficiencies meant the pilot's full control of the engines "could not be assured" the report for Radio 4's Today programme added.
The crash on the Mull of Kintyre in thick fog on June 2 killed 29 people, including more than 20 senior members of Northern Ireland's military and intelligence community.
Their loss was described at the time as a "catastrophic loss in the fight against terrorism".
An official RAF inquiry concluded the aircraft was airworthy and found the two pilots guilty of gross negligence. But three inquiries since have found that the cause of the crash was inconclusive.
Campaigners and relatives of those killed have always insisted that flaws in the Mark 2 helicopter were likely to have caused the crash and not the negligence of the pilots.
They believe the aircraft was rushed into service and the pilots, Flight Lieutenants Jonathan Tapper and Rick Cook, blamed to save face.
The MoD said the Chinook crashed in poor visibility and the fleet had a safe and successful service history.
In a statement it said: "Ministers have repeatedly stated that they would reopen the Board of Inquiry if any new evidence is raised.
"Despite numerous representations over the years, nothing has been presented to successive secretaries of state that would justify reopening the Inquiry."
Copyright © Press Association 2010
Andrew Tucker from Irwin Mitchell's Armed Forces Accident Team commented, "The families involved in the Chinook Helicopter accident have campaigned for a long time to have the Inquiry reopened. It appears that new evidence does exist that may bring into question the aircraft's airworthiness and in these circumstances it would be appropriate for the MoD to review the material when looking at the circumstances behind this tragic accident."