
Britain has agreed to decipher the silent secrets of a flight recorder following a fatal crash in Turkey last month.
The December 23 tragedy claimed the life of General Mohammed al-Haddad, the esteemed chief of Libya’s western military forces.
His Falcon 50 jet plummeted onto Turkish farmland shortly after takeoff, allegedly due to a catastrophic electrical system failure.
Four aides and three crew members perished alongside the general, leaving a void in a nation already deeply fractured.
Libyan Transport Minister Mohamed al-Chahoubi confirmed the collaboration with British experts during a press conference held in Tripoli.
Seeking a neutral arbiter, Libya rejected French involvement because the aircraft’s manufacturer and its crew hailed from that country.
International aviation protocols demand impartial analysis to ensure the integrity of findings when investigating such a sensitive high-profile disaster.
British technicians will now extract data from the device to illuminate the final, frantic moments before the vessel’s violent end.
Officials promised to release the results publicly once the investigation concludes, aiming to quell the rising tide of local rumors.
This meticulous investigation into the recorder’s memory seeks to provide closure for a nation mourning its fallen military leader.
