David Chawota, head of the Zimbabwe Civil Aviation Authority, said the information was given out to make the drill realistic.
"Telling the media was part of the exercise. We wanted to see how the media would react," he told a news conference at the main Harare International airport.
"In the event, the drill was a success because all our systems worked perfectly. Police, security and hospital staff reacted swiftly" along with the media, he said.
Soldiers, paramilitary police and security agents sealed off approaches to the airport and guarded the perimeter. Military helicopters hovered aloft as smoke rose from one runway. Reporters were not allowed close enough to see the site of the reported accident.
At Harare's Parirenyatwa hospital, extra doctors and nurses were on hand and told patients in line at the emergency room that they were expecting casualties from the main airport. The atmosphere at the hospital was tense as staff evidently believed it was a genuine emergency, witnesses said.
Emergency hospital facilities in Zimbabwe have suffered acute shortages of equipment and drugs in the nation's economic meltdown. Emergency services are ill-equipped to handle bus crashes and highway accidents.
It's not the first time aviation officials in Africa have staged an elaborate drill that involved media.
In 2006, Kenyan officials told journalists that a passenger plane had crashed near a Nairobi airport with 80 people on board
-- but when reporters arrived, they found it had only been a practice drill. There was a similar scare at the Nairobi airport in 2002.
|