An easy pilot is suspended after he has flown a plane full of 190 people, so dangerously close to a mountain that he almost crashed into it.
Captain Paul Elsworth was temporarily forbidden to fly after his plane flew less 800 ft over a mountain chain when it traveled to Egypt on 2 February and a last-resort alarm turned off in the cockpit.
The plane, which traveled from Manchester to the Red Sea -Resort of Hurghada, was very close to crashing and the hut and killing the crew, the sun reported.
The warning called 'pull-up, terrain, terrain, pull up, pull up, pull up terrain, pull up' and a dramatic last-gasp maneuver, who saw the pilot pulling the joystick to level the plane, saved until 190 passengers and crew on board who were not the danger in the danger.
But the Airbus A320 flew over the mountain range at an altitude of only 3,100ft, with the peak of the mountain 2,329 ft, was reported.
Pilots normally erase the mountain range at an altitude of 6000 ft, more than twice the height that Mr. Elsworth had flown.
Moreover, sources told that the jet dropped at a thrilling speed of 4,928 ft per minute.

Captain Paul Elsworth (right) previously made the headlines in 2016 after his son Luke Elsworth (left) was the youngest professional pilot of Groot -Britain at only 19. They were depicted the time
The newspaper reported that Mr. Elsworth, 61, only registered the incident the next day before he would leave Hurghada and fly back to Manchester.
But EasyJet officials, who acknowledge the seriousness of the incident, escalated the incident within a few minutes of receiving the report.
Although researchers have officially blamed the incident for the incident, Easyjet bosses Elsworth immediately to fly back to the UK, instead to put on a flight as a passenger.
A source said: 'Within a few moments of the flight drama that was raised, officials arrived and Paul Elsworth was forbidden to control the plane. Another cockpit crew brought the Jet home.
'The pilot is asked detailed questions. The GPWs only sounds when an airplane goes to the site – in this case a mountain.

EasyJet planes are depicted at the departure gates of Manchester Airport (file image)
“Passengers on board are supposed to be not aware of the fear and not aware of how close they got into the mountain range when the plane descended in Egypt.”
Elsworth previously made the headlines in 2016 after his son Luke became the youngest professional pilot of Groot -Britain only 19.
The pilot said at the time of his son, who is now flying to British Airways: 'Luke has worked very hard. I have so much faith in Luke who flies when I have in myself – and I have been doing this for 32 years. '
A EasyJet spokesperson said MailOnline: 'Safety is the most important priority for all our pilots, they are trained according to the highest industrial standards, depending on rigorous tests and are closely checked.
“The flight landed normally and because we have an ongoing investigation, the pilot of service remains in accordance with the procedures.”