|
On December 2nd 1964 a
Russian-built Ilyushin IL14 aircraft belonging to the
Yemeni Air Force and with an Egyptian crew
and passengers landed up-country
on the small Riyan (Lodar) airstrip by mistake. A
quick-thinking, Norfolk-born, British Army
Officer, Captain John Ricketts of the Welsh
Guards, who was on secondment to the Federal
Regular Army, recognising the error, drove out
in his Landrover and parked in front of the
aircraft to prevent it departing. The crew
smashed many of the aircraft instruments and
radio before being detained.
The reports
were that, apart from the crew, there were at least 3 fairly high
ranking Russian officers aboard who
were taken into custody but later set free.
The Dhow
newspaper reported, "Technicians of No. 131
Maintenance Unit at Khormaksar, led by
Squadron Leader S. Denyer, were called in to
make the aircraft airworthy, a task they
completed in only seven days without any
experience of this or any other Russian
aircraft. The small MU team successfully
repaired some of the smashed instruments,
translating the markings from Russian and
Arabic into English, and recalibrated them.
In cases where the Russian equipment was
beyond repair, standard RAF instruments were
fitted and in other cases smashed
instruments were removed and not replaced."
"One of
the 105 Squadron guys, Johnny Yeo,
a good old Devonshire man, took up a new ASI,
altimeter, etc, removed the damaged stuff,
substituted the RAF equipment."
Malcolm Stelfox
Paul Herbert of 105 Squadron recalls,
"Yes, we supplied a lot of the replacement
instruments from 105 Squadron to put it in a
flyable condition, to get it back to
Khormaksar."
|

Ilyushin
at Khormaksar
The Dhow continued, " While this work was
going on, other craftsmen were overhauling
the airframe and engines and had them
ground-tested. Sqn. Leader E.V. Mellor,
Senior Test Flying Tutor, and Flt Lt R.S.J.
Betteridge, a Flight Engineer, traveled
especially from the Empire Test Pilot
School at Farnborough to fly the IL14 back
to Khormaksar. Although he had experienced
over thirty types, this was the first
Russian machine Sqn Ldr Mellor had flown.
Despite that, it was reported that he made
one of the most immaculate landings seen at
Khormaksar for many months when he arrived
after the 100-mile flight. He reported that
the aircraft handled well and that the
flight posed no special problems; he also
commended the men of 131 MU on a first-class
job of work."
'Last I saw it
was parked behind the swimming pool at RAF
Khormaksar. I was working in the calibration
room at the time, after leaving 105 Sqn, and
we got to look at the strange Russian
instruments Johnny Yeo and his helper
brought back.'
The Ilyushin stood for many months between
the station swimming pool and the Hunter
servicing hanger (ASF Jets) where it became
the target of many a Stim or beer bottle
thrown from the pool verandah.
There were stories circulating that the
aircraft had gone to the Yemen, gone to
Egypt, to the UK, or was scrapped - but
these unfounded theories were all produced by the Aden
rumour mill.
"By 1966 the aircraft was on the rubbish
dump on the far side of Khormaksar airfield.
I remember doing a guard on that side of the
airfield and being able to give it a quick
look-over. Very dilapidated by then."
Malcolm Stelfox.
"It was left
rotting on the far side of the airfield. It
was there when I flew out in 1967.
Chris Dance
|