New search for long-lost Irish World War II pilot to begin - VIDEO
Pilot went missing in June 1942 after his plane crashed in Egypt
A UK team will begin searching the Egyptian desert in October for the remains of an Irish World War II fighter pilot, reports the Irish Independent.
Last May, the Cork-based Pryor-Bennett family were told that the human remains found near the wreckage of an RAF fighter plane were not those of the Fl Sgt Denis Copping, who failed to return to base in his Curtiss Kittyhawk fighter in 1942.
It was confirmed through carbon-dating that the remains discovered are "significantly older" than the World War II era.
It is understood that the pilot survived the crash in the Sahara desert in June 1942 before he wandered into the emptiness and was never seen again.
“If he died at the side of the plane his remains would have been found. Once he had crashed there, nobody was going to come and get him. It is more likely he tried to walk out of the desert but ended up walking to his death. It is too hideous to contemplate,” Historian Andy Saunders commented after the wreckage was found.
A UK lead team are supposed to begin a detailed search of the desert around the site this month.
Lost WW2 warplane frozen in time:
- Government minister calls for investigation...
- Young Irish woman turned in to U.S. authorities
- Irishman John Downey arrested for 1982 IRA...
- Amnesty International says Ireland’s abortion...
- New book ‘John F. Kennedy - Among the Germans’.
- Top bishops clash over excommunication of...
- One in seven people on social welfare in...
- Irish finance minister says US Senate are...
- Calls for Irish Justice Minister to resign...
- Nigerian migrants send $653 million a year...
the Latest #IRISHTRAVEL
-
Irish chefs Zack Gallagher and Wendy Kavanagh start new all-Ireland culinary tour business...
-
Today's Irish news roundup...
-
Elderly Irishman decribes being kept in servitude for six years by Irish Travellers gang...
-
Travel chaos across Ireland as bus drivers go ahead with strike action...
-
Today's Irish news roundup...
Make a comment

