South Pacific

Mission aviation engineer burned in accident in Papua New Guinea

Ministry is key logistical support for Adventist Church in PNG

Wahroonga, New South Wales, Australia | Jarrod Stackelroth/SPD and ANN staff

An airplane engineer serving a mission fleet in Papua New Guinea suffered burns on 50 percent of his body Tuesday following a fire during a routine maintenance on a new plane.

Linden Millist, chief engineer for Adventist Aviation Services, was burned after a fuel tank caught fire at the AAS hangar at the airport in the city of Goroka in the Eastern Highlands. He was taken by medevac to Brisbane, Australia, where he remains in critical condition while undergoing treatment at a hospital.

Millist, 33, is the son of AAS CEO Roger Millist.

AAS is working with the country’s Accident Investigation Commission to determine the cause of the incident.

AAS plays a key role in the work of the Adventist Church in Papua New Guinea. Pilots transport pastors, teachers and building materials in the isolated and rugged highlands along the Fly and Sepik River systems. Many of the remote villages are otherwise a two-day walk from main roads. AAS also assists with medical evacuations.

The ministry owns two 10-seat planes and offered more than 1,000 mission flights last year. AAS also does commercial work to help financially sustain its ministry.

Millist is one of 13 AAS staff, four of whom are pilots.

The president of the Adventist Church’s Papua New Guinea Union Mission, Leigh Rice, is calling for Adventists to pray for Millist and his recovery.

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