×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Monday
12
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 6°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Greece

Helios: 20 years since the plane crash that claimed 121 lives and shook Greece and Cyprus

On August 14, 2005, a Boeing 737-300 crashed in Grammatiko, Attica, killing all 121 people on board. It remains the deadliest aviation accident in the history of Greece and Cyprus. The tragedy was the result of a chain of human errors, inadequate training and supervision, and technical oversights

Newsroom August 14 01:21

The Morning of the Disaster

It was a quiet summer Sunday when the news broke like a thunderclap: a Helios Airways Boeing 737-300, operating flight HCY 522 from Larnaca to Athens (with Prague as its final destination), had stopped responding to radio calls and later crashed in the hills near Grammatiko.

All 115 passengers — including 22 children — and 6 crew members perished.

The Timeline of Flight 522

The aircraft departed Larnaca at around 09:07 local time, scheduled to land in Athens at 10:45. Shortly after take-off, a warning horn sounded in the cockpit — a signal the crew tragically misinterpreted. By 10:15, the plane had entered Athens airspace without responding to air traffic control.

Two F-16 fighter jets were scrambled from Nea Anchialos Air Base at 11:05, making visual contact at 11:18. The scene they encountered was chilling: the co-pilot slumped unconscious, the captain absent from the cockpit, oxygen masks dangling, and the flight deck empty.

The only conscious person on board was a flight attendant, Andreas Prodromou, who had some pilot training. Using a portable oxygen tank, he entered the cockpit and desperately tried to regain control. At 11:49, the F-16 pilots saw him at the controls, but minutes later the engines flamed out from fuel exhaustion. At 12:04, the aircraft slammed into a hillside near Grammatiko.

The impact scattered wreckage and ignited a fire. Rescue crews recovered 118 bodies; three were completely incinerated. Autopsies revealed that the passengers still had heart activity at impact but had been in irreversible comas from hypoxia.

Causes of the Tragedy

The investigation, led by Greece’s Air Accident Investigation and Aviation Safety Board with Cypriot and international experts, concluded that the cabin pressurization switch had been left in the “Manual” position instead of “Auto” during pre-flight checks. A ground engineer had set it to Manual during a leak test and failed to reset it; the crew missed the error during their checklist.

As the aircraft climbed, cabin pressure dropped dangerously. The pilots misread the warning horn — identical in sound to a take-off configuration alarm — and failed to initiate an emergency descent or use oxygen masks in time. Within minutes, both were incapacitated.

>Related articles

Aircraft carrying Libya’s Army Chief sends SOS, requests emergency landing before crashing

New Turkish Aircraft Crash: Firefighting plane down in Croatia – The pilot is dead (photos)

All 20 passengers of the Turkish C-130 transport plane that crashed on the border between Georgia and Azerbaijan are dead

The report also cited poor crew resource management and lack of training for cabin crew in such emergencies. Organizational weaknesses at Helios Airways, inadequate oversight by Cyprus’s Civil Aviation Department, and Boeing’s failure to address previous decompression incidents were all contributing factors.

Legal Aftermath

In Cyprus, five Helios executives were tried for manslaughter but were acquitted in 2013 due to lack of evidence. In Greece, however, four executives were convicted and sentenced to 124 years each (one year per victim plus three additional years). These were later reduced to 10 years, convertible to fines of about €80,000 per person.

Families of victims also sued the Republic of Cyprus, alleging negligence in aviation oversight. While the case eventually led to compensation settlements, the state never formally admitted responsibility.

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#claiming lives#plane crash
> More Greece

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

The first snow fell on Parnitha, see impressive photos

January 12, 2026

Bloomberg: Britain and Germany discuss the presence of NATO forces in Greenland

January 12, 2026

JPMorgan: Greek bonds passed the convergence test, and investors are repositioning

January 12, 2026

Who are the Basij militias who are spreading terror among protesters in Iran?

January 12, 2026

Marinakis: There will be two meetings with farmers, the Prime Minister cannot work with ultimatums

January 12, 2026

St Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church: Feeding the Homeless – Sunday, January 18

January 12, 2026

Who is Maria Gratsia, the right hand of Maria Karystianou

January 12, 2026

Rent reimbursement: On 15 January, the money is credited to the beneficiaries

January 12, 2026
All News

> Economy

JPMorgan: Greek bonds passed the convergence test, and investors are repositioning

Greek bonds are now treated as securities that have completed most of their investment upgrade - They retain their role as a stable, but no longer "one-dimensionally attractive" tool in eurozone portfolios

January 12, 2026

Rent reimbursement: On 15 January, the money is credited to the beneficiaries

January 12, 2026

AADE: Six new digital “weapons” against tax evasion in 2026

January 11, 2026

Opening access to a market of 300 million consumers for Greek products through the EU–Mercosur agreement: Benefits for olive oil, cheeses, kiwifruit, peaches and bakery products

January 10, 2026

JP Morgan: STOXX will upgrade Greece this year – Which stocks will see significant inflows

January 9, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα