Washington, March 15 (RHC)-- U.S. President Donald Trump has ordered U.S. airlines to ground all Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 9 passenger jets, in the wake of a devastating plane crash in Ethiopia Sunday that left 157 people dead.
Trump’s move came as his administration came under mounting pressure to remove the planes from service, after safety inspectors said a software glitch was likely behind Sunday’s crash, as well as the crash of a Lion Air flight of the same plane type last October that killed 189 people in Indonesia.
Trump’s move came hours after Canada became one of the last countries in the world to ground the Boeing jets. Trump continued to praise the Boeing CEO, whom he spoke to several times. Trump’s order came as the Federal Aviation Administration spent days resisting calls to ground the 737 MAX jets. The FAA hasn’t had a permanent top official for over a year, and Trump’s government shutdown stalled the approval of safety upgrades—including new software that might have prevented Sunday’s crash.
Trump orders Boeing 737 MAX planes grounded after fatal crashes
Related Articles
Commentaries
MAKE A COMMENT
All fields requiredMore Views
- Honduras kicks off 2025 election campaign with defense minister as the main candidate
- Brazil announces Cuba, Bolivia and seven other countries as members of the BRICS group
- The world celebrates the decision of the United States on Cuba and demands an end to the blockade
- U.S. oil company Chevron declares 300 million dollars in taxes in Venezuela
- ExxonMobil countersues California attorney general and environmentalists over plastic pollution claims