Two students were killed on Tuesday morning, a single-engine aircraft in the southern Steinbach province of Canada Manitoba.
Adam Penner, President of Harv’s Air Pilot Training School, said that both Cessna was practicing takeoff and landings in small shots. He said he tried to land at once and that a hundred meters collided from a small track.
The aircraft said they are equipped with radio, but the two riders did not see each other.
The police are being released with little detail but said the rider is dead It was in the scene and no passenger. The police assembled by the Royal Canadian could not confirm the victim identities at the afternoon news conference.
“I don’t have this information,” Manitoba RCMP CPL said. Melanie Roussel. “There is limited information right now.”
However, a family member identified a pilot like Savanna May Royes CBC News statementCalling “the essence of pure joy”.
“Savanna’s faith and laughter will always touch her in his short life, he was lucky to all his short lives,” the family said in the statement.
Penner said his parents started the flight school in the early 1970s with students in Canada and around the world for profession and leisure. The school covers around 400 pilot students a year.
“We have been the best training in flight for more than 51 years in the most safest way,” Schools on it testament.
Nathaniel Plett lived near flight school told CBC news and his wife had heard a loud bang on Tuesday morning.
“I said to my wife:” It’s a plane crash, “Plette said to CBC news.” A column of black smoke was a little more (we used to pop the black smoke. “
The Canadian Transport Safety Committee has been reported.
Steinbach is about 42 kilometers from Winnipeg, the capital of the province.