This is Guka - Shit Does Happen to Good People....

Field Marshal

Elder Lister
....and lightning can strike twice. The universe can be bewildering...
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The co-pilot of the ill-fated flight that crashed in Nepal on Sunday lost her husband in a similar plane crash 16 years earlier, it has emerged.

Anju Khatiwada was co-piloting Yeti Airlines flight 691 when it smashed into a gorge near the tourist town of Pokhara, killing all on board in the country's worst air disaster in 30 years.

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Her husband Dipak Pokhrel had also been co-piloting another Yeti Airlines flight when he died - and it was his death that spurred Anju to pursue a career in aviation.

Distraught at her loss, alone with their young child, Anju's grief became her motivating force.

"She was a determined woman who stood for her dreams and fulfilled the dreams of her husband," family member Santosh Sharma said.

Dipak was in the cockpit of a Twin Otter prop plane which was carrying rice and food to the western town of Jumla when it came down and burst into flames in June 2006, killing all nine people on board.

Four years later Anju was on the path to becoming a pilot, overcoming many obstacles to train in the US. Once qualified, she joined Yeti Airlines.

A trailblazer, Anju was one of just six women employed by the airline as pilots, and had flown close to 6,400 hours.

"She was a full captain at the airline who had done solo flights," Sudarshan Bartaula from Yeti Airlines said. "She was a brave woman."
Anju later remarried and had a second child as she continued to build her career. Friends and family say she adored her job, and was a delight to be around. That she and her first husband both died this way is a tragedy within a tragedy.

At the crash site in Pokhara, parts of the plane Anju was co-piloting lay scattered on the banks of the River Seti, strewn like battered pieces of a broken toy. A small section of the aircraft rested on the gorge, windows intact and the green and yellow of Yeti Airlines still visible.
 
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Is it being in the wrong place at the right time or is it the mystery of fate? One wonders if our entire lives destiny are predetermined. Do we just make life's decisions on autopilot?
 
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QuadroK4000

Elder Lister
....and lightning can strike twice. The universe can be bewildering...
---------

The co-pilot of the ill-fated flight that crashed in Nepal on Sunday lost her husband in a similar plane crash 16 years earlier, it has emerged.

Anju Khatiwada was co-piloting Yeti Airlines flight 691 when it smashed into a gorge near the tourist town of Pokhara, killing all on board in the country's worst air disaster in 30 years.

View attachment 83308

Her husband Dipak Pokhrel had also been co-piloting another Yeti Airlines flight when he died - and it was his death that spurred Anju to pursue a career in aviation.

Distraught at her loss, alone with their young child, Anju's grief became her motivating force.

"She was a determined woman who stood for her dreams and fulfilled the dreams of her husband," family member Santosh Sharma said.

Dipak was in the cockpit of a Twin Otter prop plane which was carrying rice and food to the western town of Jumla when it came down and burst into flames in June 2006, killing all nine people on board.

Four years later Anju was on the path to becoming a pilot, overcoming many obstacles to train in the US. Once qualified, she joined Yeti Airlines.

A trailblazer, Anju was one of just six women employed by the airline as pilots, and had flown close to 6,400 hours.

"She was a full captain at the airline who had done solo flights," Sudarshan Bartaula from Yeti Airlines said. "She was a brave woman."
Anju later remarried and had a second child as she continued to build her career. Friends and family say she adored her job, and was a delight to be around. That she and her first husband both died this way is a tragedy within a tragedy.

At the crash site in Pokhara, parts of the plane Anju was co-piloting lay scattered on the banks of the River Seti, strewn like battered pieces of a broken toy. A small section of the aircraft rested on the gorge, windows intact and the green and yellow of Yeti Airlines still visible.
Guka ushawahi watch final destination?
Please do, there was a scene where a young lady escaped death then after a while she needed to go to a dentist....

You know the way mdomo inategwa na dentist kama gari ikitolewa mguu or that sort of thing.... Alafu daktari akaenda kuchukua some apparatus.

Riu.... rii,

Kuna spider inakaa Tarantula ilitoka huko kwa ceiling alafu straight kwa mdomo open... Ikaanza kunyonga the lady.

But there's no Corellation I think.
 

Field Marshal

Elder Lister
Guka ushawahi watch final destination?
Please do, there was a scene where a young lady escaped death then after a while she needed to go to a dentist....

You know the way mdomo inategwa na dentist kama gari ikitolewa mguu or that sort of thing.... Alafu daktari akaenda kuchukua some apparatus.

Riu.... rii,

Kuna spider inakaa Tarantula ilitoka huko kwa ceiling alafu straight kwa mdomo open... Ikaanza kunyonga the lady.

But there's no Corellation I think.
Wueh!
 
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