A Varig Boeing 707-379C similar to the one involved in the accident
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Incident summary | |
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Date | 30 January 1979 |
Summary | Disappearance due to cabin depressurization |
Site | Pacific Ocean, 200 km (110 nmi; 120 mi) ENE of Tokyo, Japan |
Passengers | 0 |
Crew | 6 |
Fatalities | 6 |
Survivors | 0 |
Aircraft type | Boeing 707-323C |
Operator | Varig |
Registration | PP-VLU |
Flight origin | Narita International Airport (NRT/RJAA), Tokyo, Japan |
Stopover | Los Angeles International Airport (LAX/KLAX), Los Angeles, United States |
Destination | Rio de Janeiro–Galeão International Airport (GIG/SBGL), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Varig Flight 967 was an international cargo flight that disappeared on 30 January 1979 while en route from Narita International Airport in Japan, to Rio de Janeiro–Galeão International Airport in Brazil, with a stopover in Los Angeles International Airport. Neither the aircraft, a Boeing 707-323C cargo aircraft, nor the six crew members have ever been found.
The aircraft involved was a Boeing 707-323C, construction number 19235, line number 519, delivered new to American Airlines under registration N7562A on 31 August 1966, and sold to Varig and delivered as PP-VLU on 28 March 1974. The jet was powered by four Pratt & Whitney JT3D-3B engines.
The flight crew consisted of Captain Gilberto Araújo da Silva, 49, First Officer Erni Peixoto Mylius, 45, Second Officers Antonio Brasileiro da Silva Neto, 39, Evan Braga Saunders, 37, Flight Engineers José Severino Gusmão de Araújo, 42, and Nicola Exposito, 40. In 1973, Captain Araújo da Silva was in charge of flight RG 820, a Boeing 707 carrying 134 people which crash-landed near Orly Airport, in Paris, with 123 fatalities. In 1979, at the time of disappearance, he had more than 23,000 hours logged.
On 30 January 1979, the Boeing 707-323C registered PP-VLU disappeared en route from Narita International Airport to Rio de Janeiro–Galeão International Airport. The cargo aircraft, operated by Varig, lost radio contact 30 minutes after takeoff, approximately 200 km (120 mi) ENE of Tokyo. Notably, the cargo included 53 paintings by Manabu Mabe, returning from a Tokyo exhibition, valued at US$1.24 million. Neither the wreck nor the paintings were ever found.