Stabroek News

Pakistani airliner carrying 99 plunges into Karachi houses

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A Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines Airbus jet with 99 people aboard crashed into a crowded residentia­l district of the city of Karachi yesterday afternoon after twice trying to land at the airport, a witness said.

At least 80 people were confirmed to have died, provincial health authoritie­s said, but it was not immediatel­y clear whether they included casualties on the ground.

Two passengers survived, including Zafar Masood, president of the Bank of Punjab, a Sindh provincial government spokesman said. The bank said he had suffered fractures but was “conscious and responding well”.

The other survivor, engineer Muhammad Zubair, told Geo News the pilot came down for one landing, briefly touched down, then took off again.

After around 10 more minutes of flying, the pilot announced to passengers he was going to make a second attempt, then crashed as he approached the runway, Zubair said from his bed in Civil Hospital Karachi.

“All I could see around was smoke and fire,” he added. “I could hear screams from all directions. Kids and adults. All I could see was fire. I couldn’t see any people – just hear their screams.

“I opened my seat belt and saw some light – I went towards the light. I had to jump down about 10 feet to get to safety.”

Smoke billowed from the scene where flight PK 8303 came down at about 2:45 p.m. (0945 GMT). Twisted fuselage lay in the rubble of multi-storey buildings as ambulances rushed through chaotic crowds.

The crash happened on the eve of the Muslim Eid festival, when Pakistanis travel to visit relatives.

“The aeroplane first hit a mobile tower and crashed over houses,” witness Shakeel Ahmed said near the site, a few kilometres short of the airport.

The Airbus A320 was flying from the eastern city of Lahore to Karachi in the south with 91 passengers and eight crew, civil aviation authoritie­s

said, just as Pakistan was resuming domestic flights in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

A total of 80 bodies were brought to JPMC hospital and the Civil Hospital Karachi, the media coordinato­r for the health minister of Sindh said in a communique. The airline’s chief executive, Arshad Malik, told reporters he knew of 41 confirmed deaths.

Seconds before the crash, the pilot told air traffic controller­s he had lost power from both engines, according to a recording posted on liveatc.net, a respected aviation monitoring website.

“We are returning back, sir, we have lost engines,” a man was heard saying in a recording released by the website. The controller freed up both the airport’s runways but moments later the man called, “Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!”.

There was no further communicat­ion from the plane, according to the tape, which could not immediatel­y be authentica­ted.

“The last we heard from the pilot was that he has some technical problem ... It is a very tragic incident,” Malik said in a recorded video statement.

Another senior civil aviation official told Reuters it appeared the plane had been unable to lower its undercarri­age for the first approach due to a technical fault, but it was too early to determine the cause.

Aviation safety experts say air crashes typically have multiple causes, and that it is too early to understand them within the first hours or days.

 ?? REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro ?? Rescue workers gather at the site of a passenger plane crash in a residentia­l area near an airport in Karachi, Pakistan May 22, 2020.
REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro Rescue workers gather at the site of a passenger plane crash in a residentia­l area near an airport in Karachi, Pakistan May 22, 2020.

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