2016 in aviation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Years in aviation
:
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Centuries:
22nd century
Decades:
2040s
Years: 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

This is a list of aviation-related events from 2016.

Events

January

2 January
  • Indian aerial surveillance detected gunmen entering an Indian Air Force base at Pathankot, and their security forces exchange fire with them in a housing area. Four gunmen and two Indian security personnel are killed. Gunfire erupts again two hours later, and Indian helicopters fire on gunmen. Indian security declares the base secure 14 hours later.[2]
3 January
  • Indian Security forces killed two militants discovered still hiding on the base from the previous day.[2]
  • An agreement between Ethiopia and the United States was announced to close a redundant United States UAV base at Arba Minch Airport in September 2015.[3]
4 January
5 January
  • Two United States Air Force Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters were evacuating wounded Afghan troops, when one hit a wall, and the other aborted the mission under heavy fire. One American was killed and two wounded becoming the first U.S. casualties in Afghanistan in 2016.[6]
7 January
8 January
9 January
  • Tracey Curtis-Taylor completed a solo flight from England to Australia, in the Stearman open-cockpit biplane Spirit of Artemis. During the 100-day, 21,000 km (13,000 mi) flight, begun on 1 October 2015, she flew over 23 countries to recreate the first solo flight by Amy Johnson between the two countries by a woman in 1930.[10]
10 January
12 January
13 January
  • An
    Israel Defense Force said were planting explosives near the border fence.[14]
14 January
15 January
16 January
17 January
21 January
22 January
26 January
28 January
  • Iran agreed to buy 12 A380, 16
    $27 billion deal but requires United States export licenses, where some Airbus parts are manufactured. Iran does not plan on delivery of them until ca. 2020 as airport expansions and more urgent civil aviation needs come first.[28]

February

1 February
2 February
7 February
8 February
10 February
  • An Orenair Boeing 777-200 had smoke in the cabin and an engine failure flying from the Dominican Republic to Moscow, although The smoke cleared after the engine was shut down, but a tire burst during the emergency landing in Punta Cana. Passengers and crew evacuated safely.[34]
  • The
    House bill to transfer 38,000 federal government workers, including 14,000 NATCA air traffic controllers with the FAA to a corporation to operate the air traffic control system.[35]
15 February
17–18 February
  • Ankara, Turkey, on 17 February.[37]
18 February
  • The US government allowed Boeing to enter into talks with airlines in Iran. Replacing Iran's aging fleet would be a significant sale for Boeing, although the company requires additional United States government approvals before selling aircraft.[38]
19 February
20 February
21 February
  • British
    de Havilland Sea Vampire in 1945. Although retired in 1970, he continued flying until 1994.[42]
22 February
24 February
25 February
  • Kurdistan Workers Party personnel travelling through mountains in Turkey's Şırnak Province, killing nine,[44] and Turkish Air Force jets attack logistics hubs, ammunition depots, and shelters in northern Iraq, that evening.[45]
26 February
27 February
29 February

March

3 March
  • A man finds a piece of debris with a blue border on
    Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 in July 2015 raising hopes that it is from the same aircraft.[52]
4 March
  • SpaceX launches a satellite into space using an upgraded Falcon 9 rocket, but the rocket's first stage landing on the "autonomous space port droneship" floating platform is too hard for a successful recovery.[53]
  • The U.S. FAA rejected the
    balloon operators subject to safety inspections similar to those for commercial airplane and helicopter operators prompting the NTSB to respond that the rejection was unacceptable and that its recommendation remains open.[54]
5 March
7 March
8 March
9 March
12 March
  • A South African family contacted authorities in South Africa the previous week to report debris their son found on a Mozambique beach on 30 December 2015 which they took to South Africa. Aviation officials will examine it to see if it is from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.[59]
  • The Israeli Air Force attacked four
    Palestinian children are killed by an air-to-ground missile that hits their family home.[60]
13 March
  • The accident investigation into the 25 March 2015 crash of Germanwings Flight 9525 leads French authorities to call for stricter international monitoring of pilot mental health and guidelines under which doctors would report pilots whose psychological condition might put flight safety at risk. The French also urge German authorities to limit legal penalties on doctors breaching patient confidentiality in good faith to report psychological problems with pilots and to define "imminent danger" to flight safety.[61]
14 March
  • In retaliation for a suicide car bomb in
    Kurdistan Workers Party positions in northern Iraq, including ammunition depots, bunkers, and shelters.[62]
15 March
16 March
17 March
  • Saudi Arabia announced its coalition will reduce operations against Houthi rebels in Yemen, maintaining only "small" teams to advise, train, and equip Yemeni forces, but will still provide air support to Yemeni forces.[63]
19 March
21 March
  • A South African archaeologist finds debris on a beach in South Africa. The next day, a Malaysia official announced that the debris bears an aircraft engine company logo and will be examined for any connection to Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.[67]
22 March
27 March
  • Suspected U.S. UAV strikes hit two villages in Yemen with air-to-ground missiles, killing eight al Qaeda members. Later in the day, a U.S. aircraft bombed a former Yemeni government intelligence building in Yemen's Abyan Governorate that al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula used, killing 14.[69]
  • The Portuguese
    Portugália
    is rebranded as Tap Express.
28 March
  • Unidentified aircraft thought to belong to the Saudi-led coalition attack rebel targets in Yemen's Hadhramaut region southeast of Mukalla.[70]
29 March
31 March

April

2 April
  • From October 2015, the U.S.-led coalition in
    tanker trucks to impair finances.[75]
3 April
4 April
5 April
  • Islamist groups in Syria.[82]
  • A
    Syrian Arab Air Force reconnaissance aircraft, whose pilot ejects.[83]
  • A
    GPS device which ascended to 24 km (15 mi), but burst coming down, landing 48 km (30 mi) away, where the camera and GPS device were found but not the stuffed animal, prompting a search of the surrounding area.[84]
6 April
8 April
10 April
11 April
12 April
13 April
14 April
  • China over competing claims in the South China Sea.[90]
17 April
18 April
  • U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter announces that U.S. forces assisting Iraqi armed forces in recapturing Mosul from the Islamic State will use AH-64 Apache attack helicopters.[93]
  • A
    Boeing 737-800 operated for British Airways became the first jet with seating for over 100 passengers to land at the Saint Helena Airport on Saint Helena during a route proving flight in advance of scheduled services, however wind shear prevented a third landing, indicating that it remains dangerous for large commercial aircraft.[94][95]
19 April
  • Four United States Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II close air support aircraft of the 51st Fighter Wing patrol the South China Sea west of Luzon from Clark Air Base in the Philippines, an unusual mission for the A-10. It is to be the first of a series of joint South China Sea air patrols by U.S. and Philippine forces. The People's Republic of China claims the patrolled areas as internal waters and condemned a "Cold War mentality."[96]
  • A pro-Syrian-government aircraft belonged to either the Syrians or the Russians attacked the main market in
    Maarat al-Nu'man, Syria, with two air-to-ground rockets while crowded with people shopping for produce, killing at least 37 civilians.[97]
20 April
  • United States Central Command reveals that authority to order airstrikes that might endanger civilians, originally given only to its top commander, has been delegated to its commander in Baghdad and his deputies.[98]
21 April
22 April
23 April
  • Syrian Arab Air Force airplanes attack rebel areas of Aleppo for a second day, hitting a residential area and a market in the city's Tareeq al-Bab district, killing at least 12 people.[104]
  • Piloted by Bertrand Piccard, Solar Impulse 2 completed the ninth leg of an around-the-world flight, landing at Moffatt Field in Mountain View, California, after a flight from Kalaeloa, Hawaii, of 62 hours 29 minutes, covering 4,086 km; 2,539 mi (2,206 nmi) at an average speed of 65.39 km/h (35.31 kn).[105][106]
24 April
  • The Syrian Arab Air Force attacks rebel areas in Aleppo for the third day in a row, killing 16 people.[107]
  • Saudi-led coalition Ground forces begin an offensive against al-Qaeda in southern Yemen, advancing toward
    Riyan Airport.[108]
25–26 April (overnight)
26 April
27 April
  • Airstrikes by unidentified aircraft against rebels in Aleppo, Syria, destroy
    medical doctors and one of the area's last pediatricians as well as patients.[111][112]
28 April
29 April
  • Airstrikes against rebel-held areas in Aleppo, Syria, by unidentified aircraft destroy a medical clinic and hit other targets. Airstrikes against rebel-held areas and rebel mortar barrages have combined to kill more than 200 people in Aleppo during the preceding week.[112]
  • Russia and the United States announce a renewed ceasefire scheduled to begin at midnight on 29–30 April in two parts of Syria where fighting in violation of the 27 February ceasefire escalated in April. The Russian Ministry of Defense announced that the ceasefire applies to Latakia Governorate and will last 72 hours, while the United States Department of State later announces that it also includes East Ghouta outside Damascus and has no expiration date. The agreement excludes Aleppo, where the heaviest fighting since the 27 February ceasefire happened.[113]
  • A
    Toftøy
    , killing all 13 occupants.
  • United States Central Command, United States Army commander Joseph Votel, announced a U.S. Department of Defense investigation into a United States Air Force airstrike against a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, on 3 October 2015 did not find a war crime because they hit the hospital by mistake. 16 American military personnel faced disciplinary action.[112]
30 April
  • Nearly 30 airstrikes hit rebel areas of Aleppo, Syria. It is the ninth day of lethal bombardments in the city, and they have killed nearly 250 people since beginning on 22 April.[114]

May

3 May
5 May
  • Amazon announced it will buy up to 30 percent of Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings's stock and Atlas will buy 20 Boeing 767-300 cargo aircraft, lease them to Amazon for ten years, and operate them for Amazon.com for seven years via a subsidiary. Operations are expected to begin during the latter half of 2016 and grow to 2018. It doubles Amazon'sfleet from 20 to 40 Boeing 767-300s.[116]
6 May
  • Four Islamic State members were killed near
    Abu Wahib, seen in Islamic State videos, which was announced on 9 May by the United States.[117]
  • SpaceX makes a second successful landing of Falcon 9 rocket's first stage, on a platform floating in the Atlantic off Florida after launching from Cape Canaveral, after putting a Japanese satellite in orbit.[118]
7 May
  • Kurdistan Workers Party shelters, ammunition depots, and weapon positions in northern Iraq, including in the Qandil Mountains, where the group was headquartered.[119]
9 May
11 May
12 May
13 May
15 May
17 May
18 May
19 May
  • EgyptAir Flight 804 Airbus A320-232 crashed into the Mediterranean south of Karpathos, killing all 66 occupants on a flight from Paris to Cairo.
  • In response to a U.S. accusation that Chinese fighters made an unsafe interception over the South China Sea on 17 May, the
    People's Republic of China demanded that the United States cease reconnaissance flights on Chinese borders.[129]
20 May
21 May
22 May
  • F-16 Fighting Falcons were bombing Islamic State targets in Fallujah, Iraq, in an effort involving allied militias to retake the city[136]
23 May
25 May
26 May
  • A U.S.-led coalition attack in Fallujah, Iraq, killed Maher al-Bilawi, the Islamic State forces commander in the city.[144]
  • An American Airlines vice president and airport authorities in three cities ask U.S. Congress for action to reduce lines at U.S. airport security checkpoints. Measures to improve efficiency and security were removed while passenger processing was slowed.[145]
27 May
  • Tokyo, Japan
    and during the evacuation twelve of the 319 people were injured.
  • The U.S.-led coalition has conducted 20 airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Fallujah, Iraq, since 24 May, killing 70 Islamic State personnel.[144]
  • Russia warns that it will escalate its air campaign in Syria if the United States does not respond positively to its long-standing proposal to conduct joint airstrikes in Syria.[146]
  • A U.S. airstrike kills Abdullahi Haji Da'ud, Al-Shabaab's top commander, as he travels in southern Somalia.[147]
  • A Vietnamese man, Minh Quang Pham, is sentenced to 40 years in prison for providing material support to al-Qaeda in a 2011 plot to bomb Heathrow Airport in London.[148]
  • A
    P-47 Thunderbolt crashes into the Hudson River off Edgewater, New Jersey, killing its pilot.[149]
  • SpaceX successfully lands the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket after launching a communications satellite into orbit on a platform in the Atlantic 422 mi (679 km) off the coast of Florida, the fourth such landing.[150]
29 May
  • Lufthansa announced it is suspending service to Venezuela on 18 June, as Venezuela owed it millions of United States dollars in ticket revenues and that Venezuela's currency controls make it difficult to convert ticket sales revenue to dollars. They hope to restore service in the near future.[151]
30 May
  • Heavy late-evening strikes by three unidentified aircraft – reported to be Russian – against buildings around the National Hospital in Idlib, Syria, kill at least 23 and perhaps as many as 50 people and injure about 250 others. Over the preceding weekend, Russian and Syrian aircraft conducted hundreds of attacks against rebel areas in Aleppo, Syria.[146]
  • Santiago, Chile, to halt by 31 July.[152]
31 May

June

  • 88 of Iran's 250 commercial aircraft are grounded over a lack of spares due to sanctions imposed since the Iranian Revolution of 1979 that prevent replacement purchases.[154]
1 June
2 June
3 June
4 June
5 June
6 June
7 June
9 June
10 June
  • Long Island, New York, for about 20 minutes with a pilot on board, although it is configured for unmanned flight. It is the prototype for a fleet they hope to provide Internet service to over 4 billion people worldwide with from late 2016.[165]
  • United States Department of Defense officials announced that in late May 2016 President Barack Obama granted U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan expanded powers to assist Afghan forces against the Taliban including authorization to order airstrikes supporting Afghan offensive operations against the Taliban if the attacks are expected to have a "strategic effect." Previously, these had been authorized only to defend U.S. personnel, Afghan forces facing serious danger, or in counterterrorism operations.[166]
  • The F-35 Lightning II makes its international airshow debut when two Royal Netherlands Air Force F-35A aircraft perform at the Luchtmachtdagen 2016 airshow at Leeuwarden Air Base in the Netherlands.[139]
  • The United States Department of Transportation permits American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, JetBlue, Silver Airways, Southwest Airlines, and Sun Country Airlines to provide scheduled airline services between the United States and Cuba for the first in over 50 years, joining the 46 non-U.S. airlines that serve Cuba. The airlines are to make 155 round-trips per week between five U.S. cities (Chicago, Illinois; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Miami, Florida; Minneapolis, Minnesota ; and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) and nine Cuban destinations (Camagüey, Cayo Coco, Cayo Largo del Sur, Cienfuegos, Holguín, Manzanillo, Matanzas, Santa Clara, and Santiago de Cuba) beginning in late 2016 or early 2017. Havana is expected to be added later in the summer of 2016. U.S. law still prohibits tourist travel but it permits other types of travel, including family visits, official business, journalist visits, professional meetings and educational and religious activities.[167]
11 June
12 June
  • A man throws a homemade explosive device made from a beer bottle at the Terminal 2 check-in ticketing counter at
    Shanghai, China which explodes, injuring four with flying glass. He then slashes his own throat with a knife, injuring himself seriously.[170]
  • An unauthorized unmanned aerial vehicle flying near Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates, closed the airport for 69 minutes.[171]
  • Airstrikes ascribed to Russian aircraft hit Syria's Idlib Governorate, including one attack on a market which kills at least 21 people, and another in
    Maarrat al-Nu'man kills six in an apartment building.[172]
12–13 June (overnight)
13 June
14 June
15 June
16 June
  • The
    cockpit voice recorder from EgyptAir Flight 804 is recovered from a depth of about 3,000 m (9,800 ft) in the Mediterranean.[178]
17 June
18 June
19 June
20 June
21 June
  • After a 10-hour flight from
    Geographic South Pole in Antarctica to evacuate two workers who had fallen ill. It is only the third flight there during the Antarctic winter in the 60 years since the station opened in 1956 and normally, no flights occur from February to October each year. The airplane returned to the Rothera station the following day with the patients.[190][191]
  • The
    District of Columbia. The regulations also limit them to 25 kg (55 lb). The FAA expects 2.5 million UAVs to be sold to hobbyists in the United States during 2016 and 7 million in 2020. U.S. commercial UAV operators must be vetted by the U.S. Transportation Security Administration and pass an aeronautical knowledge examination at an FAA-approved test center, but do not address over-the-horizon operations by commercial UAVs. The FAA reports that there are 10,602 registered commercial UAVs in the United States and projects that 600,000 UAVs intended for commercial use will be sold in the United States during 2016 and that 2.7 million will be sold for commercial use in 2020.[192]
  • Boeing announced a tentative agreement for Iran Air to buy Boeing 737s and Boeing 777s airliners to replace its pre-1979 Boeings in the first major U.S. trade deal in Iran following the 2015 Iran-United States nuclear accord. It still faces political and regulatory hurdles, but the first new airliners could be in Iran in October 2016. The deal could be worth $25 billion, depending on how many are new or leased.[193]
22 June
  • The
    Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.[194]
23 June
  • Airstrikes combined with mortar attacks kill eight people in Aleppo, Syria.[195]
  • Solar Impulse 2 lands at Seville Airport in Seville, Spain, completing the 15th leg of its solar-powered circumnaviation without using any fossil fuel. The nonstop transatlantic flight from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, begun on 20 June, covered 6,261.2 km (3,890.5 mi) in 71 hours 8 minutes at an average speed of 88.0 km/h (54.7 mph).[196]
  • An Air Serbia Airbus A330 lands at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City after a nonstop flight from Belgrade, Serbia, inaugurating their first transatlantic route and Serbia's first nonstop service to the United States since Jat Airways, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia's national airline discontinued the route in 1992.[197]
  • Aeroméxico was the third airline announcing the suspension of service to Caracas, Venezuela, whose currency controls make it difficult to convert ticket sales revenue to United States dollars to cover operating costs.[198]
24 June
  • A U.S. Department of Defense spokesman announced U.S. airstrikes against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan during the previous week. The strikes follow a decision by President Barack Obama earlier in June to expand U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan to assist Afghan forces during offensive operations.[199][200]
25 June
26 June
27 June
28 June
  • A three-person suicide team with
    Istanbul Atatürk Airport international terminal in Turkey, killing at least 44 and injuring more than 230. Flight operations were temporarily suspended, and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounds all flights to and from Istanbul.[203][204]
29 June
29–30 June (overnight)
  • U.S., British and Iraqi airplanes and
    attack helicopters attacked two large convoys of ground vehicles fleeing Fallujah, Iraq. The strikes destroyed at least 150 vehicles and kill about 250 people but the Iraqi armed forces said that the strikes destroyed 798 vehicles including eight car bombs and kill hundreds of Islamic State combat personnel, with the U.S.-led coalition responsible for 117 of the vehicles and three of the car bombs and Iraqi aircraft destroying the rest. A U.S.-led coalition spokesman said coalition aircraft avoiding attacking portions of the convoys it thought included civilians. U.S. aircraft in the attack were diverted from supporting Syrian rebel forces attempting to capture Bukamal, Syria, which lacking air support, were defeated.[206][207]
30 June

July

1 July
2 July
3 July
  • U.S.-led coalition Airstrikes support a U.S.-backed Syrian rebel offensive against Islamic State positions near Manbij, Syria, but the attack is repelled.[213]
4 July
5 July
  • Japan denies that its aircraft engaged in provocative or dangerous activities while intercepting Chinese fighters over the East China Sea on 17 June, adding that its aircraft intercepted Chinese military aircraft about 200 times between 1 April and 30 June 2016, up from about 80 times during the same period in 2015.[179][214]
7 July
8 July
9 July
10 July
11 July
12 July
13 July
14 July
  • Airstrikes on rebel-held districts of Aleppo, Syria, reportedly kill 12 people.[232]
  • The Islamic State reportedly shot down a Syrian Arab Air Force jet near the military airport at Deir ez-Zor, Syria, killing its pilot, and a video they released purportedly shows the pilot's body which the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reports had been crucified.[232]
  • Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria and to halt Syrian government and Russian attacks on civilians and moderate Syrian rebel forces that signed a February 2016 ceasefire agreement. The proposal seeks Russian pressure on the Syrian government to ground military aircraft and restrict Russian attacks to Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra targets, and for previously rare U.S. attacks on Jabhat al-Nusra to increase along with strikes against Islamic State targets in Syria. They would share intelligence and planning for leadership targets, headquarters, camps, depots, and supply lines, with other targets off-limits to both countries, with a liaison body to assist in compliance, and to go into effect by 31 July.[233] The following day, the two countries announced that they had reached an agreement, but no details were made public.[234]
  • Airbus and Boeing have their lowest airliner sales at the
15–16 July (overnight)
  • A group of military officers in Turkey
    political asylum
    . The helicopter was returned to Turkey on 17 July.
17 July
18 July
  • Airstrikes against Islamic State areas in Syria by the U.S.-led coalition killed 15 people in Manbij and six in nearby Tokhar.[239] The United States announced that during the day the coalition conducted 18 airstrikes, destroying 13 Islamic State fighting positions, two car bombs, and seven other Islamic State vehicles.[240]
  • The pilot and copilot of
    Toronto, Ontario in Canada. The airline suspends them the next day.[241]
  • After launching a
    Dragon spacecraft, the first stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket returned to a soft landing at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, landing about eight minutes after liftoff. It was the second successful landing by a Falcon 9 first stage on land.[242]
  • The Obama administration agreed to pay 2.6 million euros to relatives of Italian aid worker Giovanni Lo Porto who was killed in a Central Intelligence Agency unmanned aerial vehicle attack in Pakistan in January 2015. On 16 September 2016, the United States government confirmed the settlement publicly.[243]
19 July
20 July
  • A
    network router fails in Southwest Airlines' computer system and back-up systems fail to activate, causing a 12-hour outage that cripples the airline's flight operations throughout the United States. Normal operations do not resume fully until 24 July, during which time Southwest cancelled about 2,300 of approximately 19,500 scheduled flights.[248]
22 July
23 July
23–24 July (overnight)
24 July
25 July
  • The U.S.
    Environmental Protection Agency issued an "endangerment finding", a scientific assessment describing a danger to the environment that determines that emissions from airplane engines including carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide pose health risks and contribute to climate change. It is the first step in a years-long process toward commercial aircraft engine emission regulations by the United States government.[253]
26 July
28 July
  • Syrian Arab Air Force aircraft drop leaflets on Aleppo, Syria, informing residents that the Government of Syria will allow them to depart the city via three safe corridors while rebel soldiers wishing stop fight would be granted safe passage through a fourth corridor.[256]
29 July
30 July
  • A
    hot-air balloon operated by Heart of Texas Hot Air Balloon Rides caught fire and crashed in a field in Maxwell, Texas, killing all 16 people on board in the deadliest ballooning accident in U.S. history and second-deadliest in world history, exceeded only by a Luxor crash in Egypt in February 2013 that killed 19.[54][259]
  • Skydiver Luke Aikins became the first to jump from an airplane into a net on the ground without a parachute. Jumping from an altitude of 7,600 m (25,000 ft), he landed safely after a two-minute freefall in a 30 m × 30 m (100 ft × 100 ft) net at the Big Sky Ranch in California.[260]
31 July
  • Responding to attempts to break the siege of Aleppo, Syrian government helicopters bomb the rebel-held neighborhood of Bustan al-Basha. Later that day, Russian Federation Air Force or Syrian Arab Air Force jets bomb the eastern part of the city. Residents burn tires to create black smoke to reduce visibility against attacking aircraft.[261]

August

  • Delta complained to the U.S. General Services Administration in August that JetBlue's use of foreign codeshare partners on government contract routes violated the Fly America Act which requires those flying on official business paid for by the U.S. government to use U.S. carriers. Delta, American Airlines and United claimed to be at a disadvantage against codeshare partner subsidies, but the GSA argued otherwise.[262]
1 August
2 August
  • IndiGo Flights 6E-813 and 6E-136, each with at least 100 people on board, narrowly avert a mid-air collision over Guwahati, India, when Flight 6E-813 makes a steep dive to avoid Flight 6E-136 coming from the opposite direction, but six people are injured.[266]
  • Syrian or Russian airstrikes killed 11 people in Atarib, Syria. Residents of Aleppo, Syria, burned tires to create black smoke to interfere with airstrikes.[104]
  • The United States Air Force announced that its first F-35A Lightning II squadron, the 34th Fighter Squadron at Hill Air Force Base, Utah is operational. The United States Marine Corps's F-35B variant had previously been declared operational.[267]
3 August
  • After air traffic control at Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates, instructed Emirates Flight 521 Boeing 777-31H from Thiruvananthapuram, India to abort its landing, the airliner crashed on the runway. All 300 occupants evacuated with 14 injured while the airplane is destroyed by fire and explosions, killing a firefighter. It is the airline's first hull loss and most serious accident. The airport is closed for 5+12 hours, and incoming flights are diverted, causing widespread disruption in the area.[citation needed]
4 August
  • A Pakistani helicopter carrying seven civil engineers from Pakistan to Russia crashed in Afghanistan where the Taliban took them hostage leading the Pakistan Army request U.S. assistance in their recovery.[268]
  • Amazon unveiled Prime One, the first of 11 being flown, of an eventual 40 leased Boeing 767 cargo airplanes to be branded as "Prime Air," for carrying Amazon Prime customer goods. Prime One is the first in Prime Air livery. Its tail number, N1997A, was highlighted in a marketing gimmick as 1997 is a prime number. Amazon will bring the remaining aircraft into service over the next several years.[269][270]
5 August
  • Il Caravaggio International Airport in Italy while landing in bad weather conditions. It crashed through a perimeter fence onto a highway, narrowly avoiding oncoming cars but destroying several in an adjacent parking lot. Neither crew members are injured. The airport closed for three hours, and flights diverted to Milan
    , Italy.
  • Black Lives Matter protesters temporarily block a road into Heathrow Airport outside London.[271]
  • A declassified, redacted copy of the Obama administration's May 2013 Presidential Policy Guidance on UAV airstrike guidelines is released to the American Civil Liberties Union after a July 2016 court order. It requires that a target be a "continuing and imminent" threat to Americans, that capture is not feasible, there is "near certainty" of their location, that no civilians be injured or killed, and that relevant domestic and international laws be obeyed.[272]
6 August
8 August
  • Delta's computer problems forced it to canceled 2,300 flights over three days, delaying tens of thousands of passengers and cost Delta $100 million in revenue.[275][276]
9 August
  • The Saudi-led coalition resumed airstrikes in Yemen following a
    Sana'a, killing 14 to 16 people and at least 10 others are injured.[277][278]
10 August
11 August
  • Russian Federation Air Force attacks on Islamic State-held Raqqa in Syria killed 20 to 24 civilians and six others who may or may not have been civilians.[279]
  • Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu announced that Turkish Air Force airstrikes will resume against the Islamic State with the U.S.-led coalition and suggested joint operations with Russia. Turkey paused operations after downing a Russian aircraft in November 2015 which strained their relationship.[citation needed
    ]
12 August
13 August
  • A Taliban offensive against
    Lashkar Gah was thwarted by U.S. air support defending Afghan forces.[283]
  • A
    Sa'dah killed 10 children and injured 28. Local reports have the children taking exams at the time, while a Saudi coalition spokesman claimed the children were rebel recruits at a training camp.[278]
14 August
15 August
16 August
  • Russian
    Jabhat Fateh al-Sham in Syria from near Hamadan in Iran, the first time Russia's attacks on Syria were made from Iran. The U.S. military is informed of the mission in advance as per the agreement to deconflict Syrian air operations. The Iranian bases reduced the distance the bombers fly from 2,000 km (1,200 mi) when flying from Russia, to 640 km (400 mi), increasing payload and sortie frequency.[291] The Iranians confirmed the Russians used an Iranian base the next day, but claim it was only to refuel.[292]
  • Syrian activists reported an airstrike against a field hospital in Syria's Aleppo Governorate that injured one person just after the hospital had been evacuated.[292]
  • Boeing 737-400. It is the first time the airline has flown since 2002.[citation needed
    ]
17 August
18 August
19 August
  • Two Syrian Arab Air Force Sukhoi Su-24 aircraft near Hasakah, Syria, where Syrian aircraft had bombed U.S. and coalition special operations forces on the ground were intercepted by U.S.-led coalition fighters and according to a U.S. Department of Defense spokesman, "encouraged" to leave the area "without further incident."[294]
21 August
22 August
23 August
  • The Nigerian Army said in multiple announcements that a Nigerian Air Force's "most unprecedented and spectacular air raid" on 19 August had killed Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, the fourth time they have said so, along with three other top commanders and 300 Boko Haram personnel, as members of the group prayed in a Sambisa Forest village in Nigeria's Borno State. They later amended that to say he was injured. None of the reports were verified.[300][301]
24 August
  • Turkish Air Force and U.S. aircraft support Free Syrian Army troops in capturing Jarabulus from the Islamic State.[302]
  • The
    Palestinian mortar fire, not an Israeli airstrike.[303]
26 August
  • The Russian government asked the Turkish government for information on its air operations over Syria. A Russian Ministry of Defense spokesman explained that they wished "to prevent air incidents because it will be the first time when Turkish warplanes will intensively bomb targets in Syria and [they] may meet Russian warplanes"[304]
27 August
  • Syrian airplanes used a barrel bomb on a funeral in Al-Nayrab, Syria, then attacked again after rescue workers arrived, reportedly killing more than two dozen people.[305]
  • The Turkish Air Force attacks Kurdish targets in Al-Amarna, Syria, south of Jarabulus.[306]
  • While
    New Orleans, Louisiana the left nacelle exploded at altitude, damaging the fuselage and causing the cabin to lose air pressure. No-one is injured and an emergency landing was made at Pensacola, Florida.[307]
28 August
29 August
  • Iranian state television reports that their Nazir radar system is operational, which it claims can detect stealth aircraft, ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles flying at altitudes of over 3,000 m (9,800 ft).[309]
  • The first nationwide regulations for unmanned aerial vehicles went in effect in the United States. They apply to commercial UAVs under 55 lb (25 kg) including payload, require that they fly only during daylight, remain within their operator's sight, not fly over people not involved in their operation, fly no higher than 120 m (400 ft), and not exceed 160 km/h (100 mph). An FAA waiver is required to exceed these limits. They also require that UAV operators pass a written test for an FAA certification to operate UAVs. The FAA has received about 3,000 requests for certification, although UAV pilots still do not need a license. They do not apply to UAVs operated by hobbyists and do not address flights over private property, although the FAA recommends getting prior permission from property owners, and specific permission for taking photographs or video.[312]
30 August
  • The Islamic State announces that its chief spokesman,
    air-to-ground missile fired by an unmanned aerial vehicle but would not confirm his death.[313] On 31 August, Russia claimed that an attack by a Sukhoi Su-34 killed as many as 40 Islamic State personnel on 30 August, including Adnani, but offered no evidence.[314]
  • Joe Sutter, the chief engineer leading the 2,700 engineers who designed the Boeing 747 in the 1960s, died at the age of 95.[315]
31 August
  • A Saudi-led coalition airstrike in Saada, Yemen killed at least 16 people, including an imam and 15 family members.[316]
  • JetBlue Flight 387 Airbus A320 flying from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Santa Clara, Cuba is the first scheduled commercial flight between the two countries in over 50 years, and the first one made with a jet, as previous flights were made before jets had entered service on the route. United States Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx is a passenger.[317][318]
  • The
    Houston, Texas, Los Angeles, California, New York City, and Newark.[318]
  • A private Cessna hired by a woman to celebrate her boyfriend's birthday by seeing New Orleans, Louisiana, from the air crashes into Lake Pontchartrain after encountering a rainstorm. The boyfriend and the pilot died, but her boyfriend pushed her from the airplane before it sank, and a nearby boat rescued her from the lake.[319]
  • A mid-air collision over a remote area near
    Cessna 208B Grand Caravan carrying three people and a Piper PA-18 Super Cub carrying two people kills everyone in both airplanes.[320]

September

1 September
2 September
  • Syrian rebel group
    anti-tank missile as the helicopter was landing northwest of Hama, Syria.[322] According to one report, it was a Syrian government helicopter from Russia or France, and two occupants were killed.[citation needed
    ]
3 September
  • Shirqat and Zuwiyah in Iraq asking for support of Iraqi forces and their allies advancing into the area against the Islamic State.[323]
4 September
5 September
6 September
7 September
8 September
10 September
11 September
12 September
  • A ceasefire in the Syrian Civil War under an agreement between Russia and the United States went into effect at sundown, but is immediately violated. Among the violations is a barrel-bomb attack against a neighborhood of Aleppo by Syrian government helicopters.[341]
14 September
  • Iraqi Air Force aircraft dropped leaflets on cities in Iraq's Nineveh Governorate to inform civilians of a planned offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State and asks civilians to stop fighting for the Islamic State, avoid Islamic State bases and help the anti-Islamic State coalition target the bases, and support advancing Iraqi troops and their allies.[323]
  • Based on a United States Navy investigation into a fatal crash while the Blue Angels flight demonstration squadron practised for an air show on 2 June, the split S maneuver will be cancelled from their shows, dive recovery rules with airspeed limitations will be instituted, performances will be made at a higher altitude, and an altitude radio check will be performed at the start of each flight. The Blue Angels' training, maintenance and culture will undergo a safety review after the air show season ends, schedules will be adjusted to ensure adequate rest, and aerial maneuvers will be reviewed to improve safety.[342]
16 September
  • The United States Air Force announced the grounding of 13 of its own
    F-35A Lightning IIs and two belonging to the Royal Norwegian Air Force due to fuel tank insulation problems which also affect 42 undelivered F-35As.[343]
  • Bulgaria's national airline Bulgaria Air announced that it will make commercial flights to the United States for the first time since the 1990s, beginning in March 2017.[citation needed]
17 September
  • A U.S.-led coalition airstrike on Syrian Arab Army forces in Syria's Deir ez-Zor Governorate mistook them for Islamic State forces, killing 62, and wounding 100 before ceasing their attack when alerted to their error. It was the first such incident between U.S.-led coalition and Syrian forces. Russia called an emergency United Nations Security Council meeting over concerns of U.S. support for the Islamic State, which would constitute a ceasefire violation. The United States expressed regret over the strike.[344]
18 September
19 September
  • The Syrian government ended the ceasefire and the Syrian Arab Air Force made at least 35 attacks against rebel-held areas in and around Aleppo, Syria. One attack west of Aleppo was on a convoy unloading aid at a Syrian Arab Red Crescent warehouse which destroyed at least 18 of 31 trucks, and killed about 20 civilians, including at least 12 humanitarian aid workers, many of them truck drivers.[347]
  • Long-Range Strike Bomber program. The B-21 is expected be operational in the mid-2020s.[348]
20 September
21 September
  • After the Russian Ministry of Defense claims that a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle was in the vicinity of the 19 September airstrike on a humanitarian aid convoy and warehouse outside Aleppo, Syria, and implies that it could have conducted the attack, the U.S. Department of Defense responds that no manned or unmanned aircraft of the U.S.-led coalition were in the area at the time.[349] At the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry accuses Moscow of inventing its "own facts" to explain the air attack, which the United States had blamed on the Russian Federation Air Force, adding that "We don't get anywhere by ignoring facts and denying common sense;" he calls for Russia and Syria to "immediately ground all aircraft" flying in areas of northwest Syria where the convoy was hit.[349]
  • The United States Government granted Airbus and Boeing licenses to sell airliners to Iran. Airbus's license covers the first 17 A320s and A330s that Iran agreed to purchase in a January. Airbus required U.S. Government permission because some components are manufactured in the United States. Boeing's license allows it to sell 80 and lease another 29 new Boeing 737s to Iran.[154]
22 September
  • Syrian Arab Air Force or Russian aircraft attack rebel-held areas of Aleppo, Syria killing 21 in evening air raids on two Aleppo neighborhoods.[350]
  • At the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry repeats his 21 September call for Syria and Russia to ground aircraft in northeastern Syria, saying that "the only way" for the Syrian ceasefire to succeed is "if the ones who have the air power in this part of the conflict simply stop using it... . Absent a major gesture like this, we don't believe there is a point in making more promises, issuing more plans."[350]
  • The
    aerospace industry, which has disputed European aircraft subsidies for 40 years and complained to the WTO about it in 2004.[351]
23 September
24 September
25 September
  • Russian and Syrian airstrikes in and around Aleppo are using
    cluster munitions
    , incendiaries and "bunker buster" bombs which have killed at least 85 people and so many ambulances were destroyed that humanitarian aid workers and first responders are unable to respond adequately to casualties.
  • At the U.N. Security Council,
    United States Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power accused Russia of "barbarism" and said the attacks are a war crime, while the Permanent Representative of Russia to the United Nations, Vitaly Churkin, said that the ceasefire's collapse was caused by U.S.-backed forces.[355]
26 September
27 September
  • The U.S. FAA demonstrated its
    Washington Dulles International Airport. They are in 45 airports in the United States, and replace the existing archaic communications system between airline pilots and control towers which relies on hand-written printed forms and radios and 50 more airports will have them by late 2016, to be followed by en route air traffic control centers across the United States, and by mid-2019, voiceless, in-flight communications should be the norm for all commercial air traffic. The FAA estimates savings to air carriers of $10 billion over 30 years.[358][359]
28 September
  • An Afghan official announced that an airstrike on a residential building in the Achin District in eastern Afghanistan has killed 13 civilians. U.S. military forces in Afghanistan acknowledge that they carried out a "counterterrorism airstrike" in Achin and are investigating if civilian casualties resulted from it.[360]
  • The United States conducted a predawn airstrike in northern Somalia, defending troops from Somalia's Puntland region who came under fire from al-Shabaab forces. A U.S. Military spokesman claimed nine al-Shabaab members were killed, while a Puntland police officer says it killed over a dozen, but officials of Somalia's Galmudug autonomous region claim that Puntland had tricked the United States into attacking Galmudug soldiers and that the strike killed 22. The U.S. Department of Defense announced an investigation.[361][362]
  • Airstrikes hit two hospitals and a bakery in eastern Aleppo. Both hospitals were out of action, and two patients were killed.[356]
  • The United States Department of State announced that the United States will suspend bilateral cooperation with Russia unless Russia ends the ongoing Syrian and Russian ground and air assault against eastern Aleppo and restores the 12 September ceasefire.[363]
  • A team from the Netherlands investigating the July 2014 Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 crash in the Ukraine announced that the airliner was shot down by a surface-to-air missile fired by a Buk missile system smuggled from Russia into a pro-Russian separatist area of eastern Ukraine a few hours before it fired on the airliner, and was returned to Russia the next day. They identified over 100 people involved in the operation and are investigating who ordered that it be fired. The team's findings matched those of American investigators, while the Russians dismissed some of the evidence. They said that its investigation was biased while Russian separatists in Ukraine said they have no access to surface-to-air missiles and said the airliner's destruction was caused by the Ukrainian armed forces.[357]
  • Unauthorized flights by an unmanned aerial vehicle near Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates, forced the airport to halt operations. Arrivals resumed after 35 minutes and full operations after 67 minutes. The incident prompts UAE officials to tighten the country's regulations regarding drone operations. A similar incident closed the airport on 12 June.[171]
29 September
30 September
  • Russian and Syrian aircraft conducted heavy airstrikes against rebel-held residential areas in eastern Aleppo, with white phosphorus and cluster munitions. Two more hospitals were hit. The World Health Organization estimates that Russian and Syrian airstrikes have killed 338 people in Aleppo since 19 September. The Syrian Network for Human Rights estimates that Russian airstrikes have killed 3,624 civilians since they began on 30 September 2015, while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimated 3,804 civilians killed. A Russian government spokesman says that Russia has no intention of reducing its involvement in the Syrian Civil War and has no projected end date for its intervention.[366]
  • Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Bert Koenders summons the Russian ambassador to the Netherlands to a meeting in The Hague to complain about Russian Government statements criticizing the Dutch team investigating the July 2014 crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 in Ukraine. Koenders describes the Russian criticism as "unsubstantiated" and "unacceptable," adding, "Given the convincing nature of the evidence, Russia should respect the results that have been presented, rather than impugning the investigation and sowing doubt."[367]

October

1 October
2 October
3 October
  • Afghan ground forces fought the Taliban with support from United States Army Boeing AH-64 Apache attack helicopters to hold Lashkar Gah, while U.S. airstrikes were made in Lashkargah and the Afghan Air Force made attacks near Kunduz.[376]
  • The United States abandoned its collaboration with Russia in Syria due to continued Russian Federation Air Force and Syrian Arab Air Force airstrikes against civilian populations in eastern Aleppo, Syria, withdrawing its coordination personnel in Geneva, Switzerland.[377]
  • From early 2015, U.S. aircraft flew over 1,000 aerial refueling sorties supporting Saudi aircraft in the Yemeni Civil War, providing tens of millions of pounds of fuel.[378]
4 October
  • U.S. military officials in Kabul, Afghanistan, announced that a U.S. Army helicopter fired at Taliban insurgents in Kunduz, Afghanistan, defending Afghan ground forces against a Taliban offensive.[379]
  • Russia announced that its
    S-200, and Buk missile systems.[380] The S-300 missiles provide anti-aircraft coverage out to 400 km (250 mi), covering almost all of Syria, Cyprus, significant portions of Israel, Jordan, Turkey, and the eastern Mediterranean.[381]
6 October
7 October
8 October
  • Saudi-led coalition airstrikes on the Grand Hall in
    during a senior Houthi official's father's funeral, killed 140 and injured 534 in the deadliest attack since Saudi Arabia entered the Yemeni Civil War. As before, Saudi officials denied their airstrikes had hit civilians.[387]
  • Russia vetoes a United Nations Security Council resolution to immediately end the Russian and Syran bombings of Aleppo, Syria.[388]
9 October
  • An Afghan Army Mil Mi-17 helicopter crashes in northern Afghanistan, killing all eight soldiers on board. The Taliban claims to have downed it, but the Afghan Ministry of Defense says a technical failure caused the crash.[389][390]
  • Saudi Arabia promised an investigation into their coalition's deadly 8 October airstrike on a funeral in Yemen, and invited U.S. participation.[387]
  • The United Nations estimated that Saudi-led coalition airstrikes caused 60 percent of the estimated 3,800 civilian deaths in Yemen since March 2015.[387]
10 October
  • Airbus announces that its Chief Operating Officer for Customers John Leahy will visit Bulgaria in November, the first visit to southeastern Europe by an Airbus executive.
  • Air Madagascar announces the resumption of services to China in 2017 with flights between Antananarivo, Madagascar, and Guangzhou, China.[391]
11 October
12 October
  • China Southern Airlines finalizes an order with Boeing for twelve Boeing 787-9 airliners, becoming China's first Boeing 787 customer in a deal is worth up to $3,2 billion, for delivery between 2018 and 2020.[395]
  • Zipline delivered blood to a remote hospital in western Rwanda with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). Zipline planned to launch a nationwide 24 hour UAV delivery service on 14 October, using 15 UAVs, and hope to expand into eastern Rwanda in 2017. The 14 kg (31 lb) fixed-wing UAVs have a150 km (93 mi) range, fly below 150 m (500 ft) to avoid aircraft, and use disposable parachutes to drop packages.[396]
13 October
14 October
  • Malaysia's Minister of Defense, Hishammuddin Hussein, announced that pending completion of negotiations, Malaysia will send combat aircraft and helicopters to the Philippines to support Malaysian troops in operations on Mindanao against the Islamic State-affiliated Abu Sayyaf, Khalifa Islamiyah Mindanao, and Maute factions.[citation needed]
  • In the previous two weeks, U.S.-led coalition aircraft conducted 66 strikes against the Islamic State near Mosul, Iraq, preparing for a ground offensive to recapture Mosul.[398]
  • The Saudi-led coalition
    bombed a funeral on 8 October in Sana'a, Yemen, which killed 140 people. The strike occurred because an individual affiliated with the President of Yemen s chief of staff claimed Houthi rebel leaders were attending the funeral, and the coalition air operations center ordered the attack without approval while also ignoring precautionary procedures to avoid attacks on civilians.[399]
  • The Turkish Air Force conducted strikes against Islamic State targets to support a ground offensive by Syrian opposition groups intending seize Dabiq, Syria.[400]
  • Syrian Arab Air Force and Russian Federation Air Force raids hit rebel-held neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo, Syria, and an air attack probably by either Russian or Syrian aircraft in Termanin, Syria, kills at least eight people and injures dozens of others.[400]
  • A
    Eastern Daylight Time. Samsung had recalled the Galaxy Note 7 because of reports of fires or explosions.[401]
16 October
17 October
  • U.S.-led coalition Aircraft and artillery attack Islamic State targets around Mosul, Iraq in preparation for a ground offensive by Kurdish
    Iraqi Army and police forces to retake Mosul from the Islamic State begins.[403]
  • Russian and Syrian government airstrikes in eastern Aleppo, Syria, kill at least 36 people.[404]
  • The Russian government announced that Russia and the Syrian government will observe a unilateral cease fire from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on 20 October for a "humanitarian pause" to allow people to evacuate to Idlib Governorate from rebel-held areas in Aleppo.[404]
19 October
  • United States Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx announced new rules to protect airline passengers in the United States, to be brought in over several years. Online airline booking services must disclose any biases toward particular airlines, likely to be required in late 2016. Statistics for mishandled bags will be compared to checked bags rather than the number of passengers, likely to be required from January 2018. Airlines must report the number of mishandled wheelchairs, likely to be in effect in 2018. Airlines will have to refund baggage fees if baggage is "substantially" delayed, rather than only if lost, to be required eventually. On-time performance reports will include regional airlines in their networks, also to be required eventually.[405]
19–20 October (overnight)
  • Turkish Air Force jets carry out 26 strikes against positions of the
    armored vehicle, and four other ground vehicles belonging to the YPG. Reports of the number of casualties vary from 14 plus dozens wounded, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, to 160 to 200 killed, according to the Turkish armed forces.[406]
20 October
  • Iraqi Army attack helicopters support ground forces attacking Islamic State positions in Bartella, Iraq, during the offensive to retake Mosul. Islamic State gunfire damages one helicopter, but it lands safely and its crew is evacuated.[407]
  • Kurdish peshmerga forces suffer increased casualties during the day in combat against the Islamic State during the Mosul offensive. A statement by the Kurdish general command ascribes the increase to a lack of air support, saying that support and air cover by the U.S.-led coalition "were not as decisive as in the past."[407]
  • Russia and the Syrian government begin a three-day pause in their bombardment of rebel-held eastern Aleppo, Syria, to allow the delivery of humanitarian supplies and the evacuation of around 200 critically injured people. The ceasefire is longer than the eight-hour pause Syria and Russia had announced on 17 October, but less than the five days requested by international aid officials.[408]
  • The European Union warns Russia of sanctions if its bombardment of civilians in Aleppo, Syria, continues.[409]
  • American Airlines reported a 56 percent drop in net income for the third quarter of 2016, from 1 July to 30 September, with a net income of $737.000,000. Airplanes flying below capacity, a large tax bill and increased labor costs contributed. Quarterly revenue was $10.6 billion, down 1.1 percent from 2015.[410]
  • The French company Skylights released the second version of its virtual reality Bravo headset. Trial runs ran the previous year with Air France and KLM.[411]
21 October
22 October
23 October
  • Following diplomatic talks between Colombia and Venezuela, Colombia lifts its flight ban which followed a Venezuelan fighter intercepting an Avianca Boeing 787.[416]
  • A Morton County, North Dakota, Sheriff's Department helicopter monitoring a Dakota Access Pipeline protest felt threatened by a protester's UAV, which they damaging after shooting at which protestors claimed was to prevent their own activities being filmed.[419][420]
24 October
25 October
26 October
  • Russian or Syrian airstrikes against a residential area and two schools in Idlib Governorate kill at least 26 civilians, many of them children.[426]
  • Two
    Mek'ele. Ethiopian Air Force fighters escorted them to Mek'ele after entering Ethiopian airspace.[427]
27 October
28 October
29 October
  • An unauthorized UAV near Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates, closed the airport for 84 minutes, along with nearby Sharjah International Airport, for a similar amount of time. It is the third incident in 2016.[433]
  • Saudi-led coalition airstrikes on a security complex in
    Hodeidah, Yemen, killed from 43 to 60 people and injured scores more, mostly prison inmates. The coalition said that it was a legitimate target because the Houthis used it as a command-and-control center for military operations.[434]
30 October
31 October

November

1 November
2 November
3 November
  • Airstrikes supporting Afghan government troops fighting to push Taliban forces out Kunduz, reportedly kill 30 civilians and injure 25 others in and around the city. One report puts the death toll at up to 100 civilians.[437][438] U.S. military officials will acknowledge on 5 November that the airstrikes inflicted casualties on civilians, but do not estimate the number of casualties.[438]
5 November
  • Bulgaria Air announced it is seeking up to six Airbus A320neos, however no deal has been negotiated.[citation needed]
  • Philippine Airlines announces the retirement of the Airbus A320 from its fleet, beginning in 2017.[citation needed]
6 November
  • Slovakian Go2Sky announced that in December 2016, it will be the first Slovak Airbus A320 operator when one joins its current four aircraft.[439]
  • North Atlantic Treaty Organization jets have scrambled over 600 times since 1 January to monitor Russian military air traffic around Europe.[440]
7 November
8 November
  • Seven U.S.-led coalition airstrikes on six Islamic State units near Ayn Issa, Syria, destroy three fighting positions, a vehicle, and a car bomb facility.[443]
9 November
  • The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that a U.S.-led coalition strike in Heisha, Syria, killed over 20 civilians and injured 30. The coalition said it will investigate.[444]
  • United States Central Command announced that since 2014 its airstrikes in Iraq and Syria killed an estimated 119 civilians, up 64 from previous estimates.[445]
11 November
13 November
  • Airstrikes on rebel-held areas in Aleppo Governorate in Syria knock out a
    Kurdish-held Afrin District and rebel-held parts of Aleppo Governorate kills from 8 to 12 people.[447]
15 November
16 November
  • Syrian government airstrikes on eastern Aleppo, Syria, badly damaged the city's last children's hospital and killed over 87 people. Russia denied involvement, claiming to have conducted none there since 18 October. Russian aircraft and cruise missile strikes continue in Idlib Governorate, where 34 sites have been hit, six people killed and dozens wounded since 15 November.[451]
19 November
  • An airstrike by an unmanned aerial vehicle in
    Nangahar Province in eastern Afghanistan killed eight Islamic State personnel including a top Islamic State commander.[452]
20 November
21 November
  • The United States authorized Airbus to sell 106 airliners to Iran (up from 17 previously allowed), which it announced the next day.[454]
22 November
23 November
24 November
25 November
  • Watchdog group Airwars announced that U.S.-led coalition air and artillery strikes killed between 84 and 87 civilians and wounded over 160 since an offensive against Islamic State forces in Mosul began on 17 October. The United States Central Command responded that "the liberation of Mosul is an operation that is an order of magnitude larger and more complex than" previous operations, adding that proposed strikes are reviewed using intelligence and surveillance to verify targets beforehand and that coalition strikes destroyed dozens of car bombs and tunnels.[462]
  • An
    Evergreen 747 Supertanker aerial firefighting aircraft, based on the Boeing 747-400, arrived in Israel to assist against major wildfires burning for four days. Azerbaijan also sends a firefighting aircraft and Egypt sends two helicopters.[463]
26 November
27 November
28 November
29 November
30 November
  • Bulgaria Air announced it is ending aircraft
    wet-lease agreements in 2017.[469]

December

1 December
2 December
  • Bulgaria Air announced services between
    Bangkok, Thailand and Sofia, Bulgaria, from April 2017.[citation needed
    ]
4 December
5 December
6 December
7 December
  • After an engine failure,
    ATR 42-500 crashed near Havelian, Pakistan, killing all 47 on boardm including Pakistani actor, singer-songwriter, and televangelist Junaid Jamshed
    .
8 December
10 December
11 December
12 December
13 December
  • A
    Okinawa after an aerial refueling hose damaged a propeller. Its five-man crew was rescued, two with minor injuries. U.S. military grounds its Ospreys in Japan after being called to do so by the Japanese Government on 14 December.[485]
14 December
15 December
18 December
20 December
  • Bulgaria Air announced 16 additional destinations to be added in 2017 when it receives new aircraft.[citation needed]
  • Since the coalition air campaign against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria began in August 2014, coalition forces have conducted over 16,000 airstrikes at a cost of $12.5 million per day, killing an estimated 50,000 Islamic State personnel. The coalition has launched an average of 56 strike sorties per day since the campaign began.[453]
22 December
  • After over four years of airstrikes on homes, schools and hospitals by the Syrian Arab Air Force and the Russian Federation Air Force, Aleppo finally fell.[490]
  • A drunk Russian who claimed to be meeting his girlfriend drove his car into the Kazan International Airport terminal in Russia, and pursued by security who were on foot, drove past security checkpoints before being arrested at a railway platform.[491]
  • U.S. President-elect Donald Trump tweeted that he was reconsidering the F-35 Lighting II purchase due cost overruns for the cheaper
    F-18 Super Hornet.[492]
23 December
25 December
26 December
  • Bulgaria Air announced that its first Boeing 767-300 will be delivered in March 2017, followed by three more in May 2017.[citation needed]
  • Air Moldova announces that it will buy two more Airbus A320s, to enter service in 2017, bringing their fleet of A320s to four.[citation needed]
29 December
  • U.S. military officials reported that a coalition airstrike on a van carrying Islamic State personnel in a hospital compound in Mosul, Iraq, inadvertently killed civilians and announced an investigation into the incident.[496]
  • A
    corporate jet with six on board crashed into Lake Erie while climbing after takeoff from Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport in Ohio.[497]
31 December

First flights

January

February

March

April

May

July

August

  • 17 August –
    Hybrid Air Vehicles Airlander 10[295]

October

November

December

Entered service

Retirements

14 January
7 October
23 November

Deadliest crash

The deadliest crash of this year was a government official flight, namely the

Airbus A320 which crashed into the Mediterranean Sea
on 19 May, killing all 66 people on board.

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External links

Media related to 2016 in aviation at Wikimedia Commons