The helicopter pilot killed when his helicopter crashed in central London has been named as Pete Barnes.
He died after the aircraft hit a crane on St George
Wharf Tower, in Vauxhall, amid heavy fog.
It cartwheeled out of the sky, smashed into two cars
as it hit the ground and exploded into flames.
Mr Barnes - the only one aboard the helicopter - and a person on the ground were killed, the Metropolitan Police said.
Mr Barnes - the only one aboard the helicopter - and a person on the ground were killed, the Metropolitan Police said.
The 50-year-old pilot from the Reading area had worked
for the RotorMotion helicopter charter business for 15 years and had flown
aircraft during the production of films such as Die Another Day and Saving
Private Ryan.
"He was a very highly skilled pilot, one of the
most experienced in the UK, with over 12,000 flying hours," the company
said in a statement.
It added it was "devastated by the loss of a
highly valued colleague and very dear friend".
The helicopter was on a long lease to RotorMotion from
Castle Air Charters, whose managing director Ross Bunyard said: "We are
not in a position to make any further comment, beyond expressing our sympathies
and condolences to all those affected by the accident."
Twelve people were injured. Five are in hospital,
including one with a broken leg, and seven were treated at the scene.
One man was rescued from a burning car.
Burning wreckage and aviation fuel covered the road,
as cars caught fire and people screamed and ran seeking shelter from the flying
debris, witnesses have said.
Two office buildings, five cars and two motorbikes
were damaged.
Flames raged and a huge column of black smoke billowed
from the crash site just off Wandsworth Road, near South Lambeth Road.
Firefighters say the crane is now in a
"precarious" position, but ruled out any "imminent risk" of
a collapse.
They have urged people to stay away from the area
while specialists assess the damage sustained by the crane.
Rescue crews searched the River Thames following
reports that somebody had been seen in the water after the crash.
Emergency services say the Agusta 109 helicopter was
on a scheduled commercial flight from Surrey to Elstree, but was diverted to
Battersea due to bad weather.
The Augusta 109 helicopter that crashed
Flights
in and out of London City Airport, in Docklands, had been delayed earlier in
the day due to poor visibility.
Shortly
after the crash at around 8am, firefighters, police and ambulances rushed to
the scene.
Michael
Krumstets, who lives in the area, said he had seen the helicopter hit the crane
and the aircraft fall "directly towards us".
"We
ran from the side of the road and it hit the road just besides us … and then it
exploded," he said.
Sarah-Beth
Casey lives in an apartment near the scene.
She told
Sky News: "You're always worried about things like 9/11 and things like
that.
"When
I heard the explosion, it was like a little earthquake. It was like a gas
explosion. I looked up to see debris falling off the tower."
The tower
is a 185-metre (200-yard) high cylindrical block overlooking the Thames and the
Houses of Parliament.
Bruce Grain,
a station manager for London Fire Brigade and among the first to
arrive at the scene, said the driver of one of the cars that had been hit
managed to get out, while the driver of the other vehicle could not be
immediately located.
"Large
parts of the helicopter are in the road," Mr Grain told Sky News.
"There
is debris over surrounding buildings … three buildings."
He said
fire fighters had extinguished the fire.
David
Cameron said rules for helicopter flights over central London would need to be
carefully looked at following the accident.
The Prime
Minister was "very saddened to learn of the fatalities and injuries"
in the crash, his spokesman said.
Mayor of
London Boris Johnson said the lighting of cranes and tall buildings would be
reviewed, but that it would be "premature" to second guess the
investigation into the collision.
Aviation
expert Chris Yates told Sky News that any tall structure must have a warning
light on top to alert pilots.
The
question is, he said, whether there was a warning light on the crane and
whether the pilot would have been able to see it in the foggy conditions.
RotorMotion
says on its website that its helicopters "are fully instrument qualified
to fly in poor weather conditions".
The
company, whose website features pictures of famous passengers including the
Dalai Lama, offered its "full support and assistance" to authorities
investigating the crash.
The
crash, which happened close to a railway line during rush hour, disrupted
transport across central London.
Roads
were cordoned off and train services were briefly suspended but are now running
in and out of Waterloo station, while Vauxhall tube station was closed but has
now reopened.
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