ICAO Rewrites the Crash Investigation Rulebook

by | May 5, 2026 | Aviation World | 0 comments

The International Civil Aviation Organization has rewritten the rulebook for aircraft accident investigations. On 27 March 2026, ICAO’s Council approved Amendment 20 to Annex 13 — the first major revision to the global investigation framework in years — specifically addressing the problem of states that suppress, delay, or compromise crash investigations when the findings might prove politically inconvenient. The timing is not subtle. The amendment arrives as China continues to withhold its final report on the MU5735 crash (now four years overdue), as questions linger about investigations into incidents involving state actors, and as the aviation community increasingly acknowledges that the current system has no effective mechanism to force a state to complete an honest investigation.

Quick Facts

  • What: Amendment 20 to ICAO Annex 13 (Aircraft Accident Investigation)
  • Approved: 27 March 2026
  • Effective: 23 November 2028
  • Key change: New rules on conflicts of interest in investigations
  • Provisions: Mandatory unrestricted access to evidence; delegation options; observer rights
  • Context: Responds to concerns about suppressed investigations (including MU5735)

The Problem

Under the 1944 Chicago Convention, the state where an accident occurs is responsible for conducting the investigation. This works well when the investigating state has no stake in the outcome — a neutral, professional investigation authority examines the wreckage, analyses the data, and publishes findings that make aviation safer for everyone. But what happens when the investigating state has a conflict of interest? When the aircraft was destroyed by that state’s own military? When the crew’s actions might embarrass a national airline? When the findings might contradict an official political narrative? In those cases, the current system has no enforcement mechanism. A state can simply refuse to investigate, refuse to publish, or publish findings that contradict the evidence — and the international community has had no formal recourse.

What Changes

Amendment 20 introduces several new mechanisms: States may now formally delegate investigations to another state or to a regional investigation organisation when an actual or perceived conflict of interest exists. This provides a face-saving exit for states that cannot credibly investigate their own incidents. ICAO and third-party states may be invited to observe investigations — adding international oversight that makes suppression more difficult. Investigation authorities must have “unrestricted access to all evidential material without delay” — new language designed to prevent authorities from restricting access to wreckage, flight recorders, or witnesses. States must provide “timely, verified factual information to the public” — a transparency requirement that makes it harder to simply stonewall without explanation.

What It Doesn’t Fix

Amendment 20 is a significant step, but it has limitations. ICAO cannot compel a sovereign state to do anything. The amendment provides tools, guidance, and moral authority — but no enforcement mechanism with teeth. A state that chooses to ignore its Annex 13 obligations can still do so, facing reputational damage but no concrete sanctions. The amendment also won’t take effect until November 2028, giving states two and a half years to transpose the provisions into national legislation. During that period, the existing — flawed — framework remains in force.

Why It Matters

Aviation safety depends entirely on learning from accidents. Every crash investigation that is suppressed, delayed, or distorted represents lessons unlearned — and potentially lives lost in future accidents that could have been prevented. The system works only if investigations are conducted honestly, completely, and publicly. ICAO’s amendment acknowledges what the aviation community has known for years: not all states investigate accidents in good faith. By creating formal mechanisms for delegation, observation, and transparency, Amendment 20 gives the international community its first real tools to push back against investigative failures. Whether those tools prove sufficient remains to be seen — but for the first time, they exist.

Sources: ICAO official announcement, Caribbean News Global, Bangladesh Monitor, Interama

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