The Jerusalem Post

97 killed in Pakistani airliner crash

- • By SYED RAZA HASSAN

KARACHI (Reuters) – The flight data recorder from the Pakistani airliner that crashed into a residentia­l neighborho­od of Karachi has been found, an official said on Saturday, as the death toll rose to 97.

There were two survivors from onboard the aircraft, while no fatalities were reported in the densely populated area of the city where the aircraft crash-landed on Friday.

Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA) flight PK 8303, an Airbus A320, was flying from Lahore to Karachi with 99 people on board when it went down in mid-afternoon while trying a second landing attempt.

“The black box had been found late yesterday, we are handing it over to the inquiry board,” PIA spokesman Abdullah Khan said. He said that included both the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder.

The airline’s chief executive, Arshad Malik, said on Friday the last message received from the pilot indicated there was a technical problem.

Another senior civil aviation official told Reuters it appeared the plane had been unable to lower its landing gear for the first approach.

Aviation safety experts say air crashes typically have multiple causes.

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.

Airbus said the jet first flew in 2004 and was fitted with engines built by CFM Internatio­nal, co-owned by General Electric and France’s Safran.

Pakistan’s prime minister, Imran Khan, announced soon after the crash that there would be an inquiry, and a four-member team was constitute­d Friday night, according to a notificati­on from the government’s aviation division, seen by Reuters.

The team includes three members of the Aircraft Accident and Investigat­ion Board and one from the Pakistan

Air Force’s safety board. The team will issue a preliminar­y statement within a month, the notificati­on says.

A statement from the provincial health minister’s office on Saturday put the death toll at 97, with no confirmed deaths on the ground.

Army and civil administra­tion personnel were clearing through the debris in the Karachi neighborho­od on Saturday and assisting residents whose homes had been damaged.

“Rescue Op in progress ... 25 affected houses cleared, their residents accommodat­ed at various places with assistance of Civil Administra­tion,” the Army said on Twitter.

Pakistan only last week resumed domestic flights it had suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with many people traveling for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, expected to fall on Sunday or Monday in the country.

Friday’s crash is the worst air disaster in Pakistan since 2012, when a Bhoja Air passenger aircraft, a Boeing 737, crashed in Islamabad, killing 127 people.

 ?? (Akhtar Soomro/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE STAND next to the debris of a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines plane after it crashed into a residentia­l area in Karachi on Friday.
(Akhtar Soomro/Reuters) PEOPLE STAND next to the debris of a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines plane after it crashed into a residentia­l area in Karachi on Friday.

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