Business Standard

71 dead, no survivors in Russian plane crash

- MARIA KISELYOVA & ANDREW OSBORN Moscow, 11 February

A Russian passenger plane carrying 71 people crashed outside Moscow on Sunday after taking off from the capital’s Domodedovo airport, killing everyone on board. The Antonov An-148 plane was flying to Orsk, a city in the Urals, and crashed in the Ramensky district. State television aired a video of the crash site, showing parts of the wreckage in the snow. Russia has seen record high snowfall in recent days and visibility was reportedly poor.

A Russian passenger plane crashed near Moscow soon after take- off on Sunday, killing all 71 people on board, and investigat­ors said they were looking at all possible causes.

Temperatur­es were around minus five degrees Celsius with periodic snowfall when the short-haul AN148 operated by Saratov Airlines took off for the city of Orsk in Orenburg region, about 900 miles (1,500 km) southeast of the capital.

President Vladimir Putin offered condolence­s to those who had lost relatives and ordered a special investigat­ive commission to be set up.

“According to preliminar­y informatio­n, nobody survived,” the Kremlin said in a statement.

The office of Russia’s transport prosecutor said all 71 people on board had been killed. Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov confirmed there were no survivors and said DNA tests would be needed to identify the dead.

TV images of the crash site showed wreckage of the plane, including at least one engine, lying in fields covered with thick snow.

Helicopter­s were at the scene as well as rescuers on snowmobile­s. An official of the Emergency Situations Ministry said two bodies and a flight recorder had been found.

Debris and human remains were spread over a radius of a kilometre from the crash site, investigat­ors said.

They said they had opened a criminal case into the incident.

Among the possible causes they listed were weather conditions, human error and the plane’s technical condition. No distress signals had been received from the crew.

The plane, manufactur­ed in 2010, had been carrying 65 passengers and six crew. It disappeare­d from radar screens shortly after taking off from Moscow's Domodedovo airport.

Interfax news agency said one Swiss national had been among the passengers.

Elena Voronova, a spokeswoma­n for Saratov Airlines, said there had been no concerns about the technical condition of the plane, which went into service with her company in 2016.

Images broadcast on state TV showed relatives waiting at Orsk airport, some with their heads in their hands.

The city’s mayor told the Rossiya 24 TV channel a team of psychologi­sts was working at the airport to comfort people.

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