• On 21 August 1944, an LAB
Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar (
registered CB-25) was destroyed in a fire at
La Paz Airport. • On 29 May 1947, an LAB
Douglas C-47 Skytrain (registered CB-32) crashed near
Trinidad. • On 10 August 1949, an LAB
Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commando (registered CB-37) crashed near
Rurrenabaque. In September of the same year, a Lodestar (registered CB-26) was damaged beyond repair in a shooting during the
Bolivian National Revolution. • In 1950, two LAB C-46s crashed: CB-51 near
Cochabamba on 24 April, and its sister aircraft CB-38 on 2 October near
La Laguna Lake. • On 1 January 1951, an LAB C-47 (registered CB-31) was damaged beyond repair in a crash-landing at La Paz Airport. • On 3 November 1953, a Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano
Douglas DC-3 (registered CP-600) crashed into a mountain near
Potosí, killing the 25 passengers and 3 crew members on board. The aircraft had been on a scheduled domestic flight from
Camiri to
Sucre. • On 5 September 1955, two LAB aircraft collided mid-air over Cochabamba: A DC-3 (registered CP-572) on a scheduled passenger flight, and a
Boeing B-17G (CP-597) on a cargo flight. The Boeing crashed, killing all three crew members. The DC-3 managed to perform an emergency landing. • On 25 August 1956, a cargo-configured Lloyd Aéreo DC-3 (registered CP-506) crash-landed at La Paz Airport, killing two out of the three people on board. • On 26 September 1956, the first hijacking of a commercial flight with political purposes was of the Lloyd Aereo Boliviano on 26 September 1956. The airplane (
DC-4), carried 47 prisoners. They were being transported from
Santa Cruz, Bolivia to the town of El Alto, in
La Paz. There, a political group was waiting to take them to a concentration camp located in Carahuara de Carangas,
Oruro. The 47 prisoners gained control of the aircraft in mid-flight and rerouted the airplane to
Tartagal, Argentina. Two of the 47 prisoners took control of the aircraft controls and received instructions to again reroute to
Salta, Argentina as the airfield in Tartagal was not big enough for the DC-4. They did and moments later arrived safely to the city of Salta. They told the government of the injustice they were submitted to, and received
political asylum. • On 18 March 1957, another DC-3 (registered CP-535), which had been on a passenger flight from Cochabamba to
Oruro, crashed into a mountain near
Sayari. All 16 passengers and 3 crew members died. • On 31 December 1959, all 11 occupants of an LAB C-47 (registered CP-584) died when the aircraft crashed shortly after take-off from an airfield near
San José de Chiquitos. • On 5 February 1960, a Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano
Douglas DC-4 (registered CP-604), that had been on a scheduled passenger flight from Cochabamba to La Paz, crashed shortly after take-off into Laguna Huañacota, a mountain lake, following an engine fire. All 55 passengers and 4 crew members lost their lives (a two-year-old girl could be saved, but later died in hospital). • On 21 August 1962, an LAB C-47 (registered CP-536) crashed near
Cochabamba Airport during a post-maintenance test flight, killing four out of the five people on board. • On 15 March 1963 at approximately 13:55 local time,
Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano Flight 915 from
Arica,
Chile to La Paz, that was operated by a
Douglas DC-6 (registered CP-707) on this day, crashed into Mount
Chachakumani, killing all 36 passengers and three crew members. At the time of the accident, there were poor visibility conditions due to bad weather. • On 4 February 1964, an LAB C-47 aircraft (registered CP-568) crashed shortly after departing
Yacuiba Airport, killing two out of the 29 people on board. • On 3 August 1966, an LAB C-46 (registered CP-730) that had been on a cargo flight from
Riberalta to Cochabamba crashed into a mountain range of the
Andes, killing all three people on board. The accident likely occurred because of a navigational error of the pilot, who had chosen a wrong flight path and subsequently had flown at the wrong altitude. • On 19 April 1968, an LAB DC-3 (registered CP-734) crashed shortly after take-off from an airstrip at
Trinidad. Even though the aircraft was damaged beyond repair, there were no fatalities. • On 26 September 1969 at around 15:10 local time, an LAB DC-6 (registered CP-968) carrying 69 passengers and 5 crew members on a scheduled flight from
Santa Cruz de la Sierra to La Paz crashed into Mount Choquetanga 176 kilometres away from the destination airport. There were no survivors when the wreckage was found after three days.
Seventeen Bolivian football players had been amongst the passengers. • On 16 December 1971, an LAB passenger flight from
Sucre to La Paz was hijacked and demanded to be diverted to
Chile. The aircraft landed at Cochabamba Airport instead, police forces stormed the plane and arrested the perpetrator. In the ensuing shooting, one crew member and one passenger were killed. • On 13 October 1976 at 13:32 local time, a
Boeing 707 freighter aircraft (registered N730JP) that had been chartered by LAB to operate a cargo flight from Santa Cruz de la Sierra to
Miami crashed directly after take-off from
El Trompillo Airport into a housing area and a crowded football pitch, killing the three crew members as well as 88 people on the ground, making it the deadliest air disaster in Bolivia to date. The accident had likely occurred because the pilots had not selected the correct amount of thrust, so that the aircraft did not gain sufficient height. • On 23 January 1980, a LAB
Fairchild F-27J (registered CP-1175) ran off a
taxiway whilst being on ground at
Santa Ana del Yacuma Airport and went into a ditch, during which the fuel tank was ruptured by debris from the propeller. In the ensuing fire, the aircraft was destroyed, but all 15 passengers and the three crew members could be saved. • On 2 June 1980, a Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano F-27J (registered CP-1117) crashed into a hill whilst approaching
Yacuiba Airport, killing the 10 passengers and three crew members on board. • On 16 March 1984, another F-27M (registered CP-862) crashed, this time in a jungle somewhere between
Trinidad and
San Borja, claiming the lives of the 20 passengers and three crew. • On 23 January 1985, a passenger detonated a bomb in a lavatory on board an LAB flight from La Paz to Santa Cruz de la Sierra, killing him. The aircraft involved, a
Boeing 727-200 registered CP-1276, was substantially damaged but could safely be landed. There were no fatalities among the other 119 passengers and seven crew members. • On 31 August 1991, an LAB Boeing 707 (registered CP-1365) was destroyed in a hangar fire at
Dothan Regional Airport in the United States. • On 22 December 1994, a Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano
Fokker F27 Friendship (registered CP-2165) overran the runway at
Guayaramerín Airport following a
rejected takeoff and crashed into trees. All 36 passengers and four crew members survived the accident. The planned destination of the scheduled domestic flight had been
San Joaquín. • On 9 January 2001 at 17:20 local time, the left main
landing gear of an LAB Boeing 727-200 (registered CP-2323) collapsed while taxiing at
Buenos Aires Ezeiza Airport prior to a scheduled flight to Santa Cruz de la Sierra. Investigator found that the accident, by which none of the 138 passengers and 8 crew members were injured but left the aircraft damaged beyond repair, happened because of corrosion damage. • On 7 August 2004, an LAB
Boeing 767-300ER (registered CP-2425) experienced a hard landing at
Viru Viru International Airport following a scheduled flight from Miami, and was substantially damaged. • On 1 February 2008 at 10:35 local time, the pilots of
Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano Flight 301, a Boeing 727-200 (registered CP-2429) had to execute a forced landing in a jungle clearing near
Trinidad due to fuel exhaustion. The aircraft carrying 151 passengers and 8 crew had been on a scheduled flight from La Paz to
Cobija, when it had to divert to Trinidad due to bad weather conditions, ultimately failing make the distance with the remaining fuel. There were no fatalities; the aircraft was damaged beyond repair. ==Notes==