Irish Daily Mirror

Bats ride out storm in US

100 dead as plane smashes into Pakistan’s biggest city

- BY TOM PARRY Special Correspond­ent tom.parry@mirror.co.uk @Parrytom

A TEXAS meteorolog­ist shared radar footage showing a large swarm of bats being dispersed by a thundersto­rm.

Chris Suchan said: “Dual-pol radar works beautifull­y to distinguis­h these bats from rain when both are on radar.”

The passenger jet seconds before impact

UP to 100 people are feared to have been killed when a plane crashed into homes in Pakistan’s biggest city.

Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines flight PK 8303 plunged from the sky as it prepared to land at Karachi Jinnah airport yesterday.

Footage from the scene showed thick smoke rising from the Model Colony area, where dozens of people were thought to be trapped underneath collapsed roofs.

As firefighte­rs doused the crash site, a baby was miraculous­ly pulled from the wreckage and carried to safety.

But despite a huge search operation, only two of the 91 passengers were thought to have survived, with all eight crew feared dead.

PIA chief executive Arshad Malik said the pilot had told air traffic control the Airbus A320 was having “technical difficulti­es” as he made his descent.

In a recording obtained by a local TV channel, the

LIFTED TO SAFETY pilot can be heard saying the plane, which had flown from Lahore, had “lost two engines”.

Seconds later, in a final desperate message, he cried: “Mayday. Mayday. Mayday”.

The plane then veered off its course as he lost control.

Witness Mohammed Uzair Khan said: “I can’t tell you what

A PIA Airbus A320 a horrible thing it was. Almost four houses were completely collapsed, there was so much fire and smoke.”

Crowds gathered near the scene of the tragedy – in one of the poorest parts of Karachi – as smoke filled the streets.

The city is home to almost 15 million people.

Pakistan’s prime minister, Imran Khan, said he was “shocked and saddened” by the crash and promised an inquiry.

The crash comes just days after the country allowed commercial flights to resume after a coronaviru­s lockdown.

It is another grim entry in the country’s chequered aviation safety record.

In 2010, a plane operated by private airline Airblue crashed near Islamabad, killing all 152 people on board.

Two years later, a Bhoja Air Boeing 737-200 crashed near to Rawalpindi, killing all 121 passengers and six crew members.

And in 2016, a PIA domestic flight came down, claiming 47 lives.

 ??  ?? HORROR SCENE Firefighte­rs douse the crash site
DOOMED
HORROR SCENE Firefighte­rs douse the crash site DOOMED
 ??  ?? A young child
A young child
 ??  ?? FLIGHT
FLIGHT

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