No alert before deadly plunge
RUSSIA: A Russian airliner that had just taken off from the country’s second-busiest airport crashed yesterday, killing all 71 people aboard and scattering jagged chunks of wreckage across a snowy field outside Moscow.
The pilots of the An-148 regional jet did not report any problems before the twin-engine aircraft plunged into the field about 40km from Domodedovo Airport, authorities said.
The Saratov Airlines flight disappeared from radar just minutes after departure for the city of Orsk, some 1500km to the southeast.
Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov confirmed there were no survivors.
The 65 passengers ranged in age from 5 to 79, according to a list posted by the Russian Emergencies Ministry, which did not give their nationalities. Six crew members were also aboard.
Emergency workers combed through the field while investigators descended on the airport to search for clues to what brought the jet down. One of the flight recorders was recovered, Russian news reports said, but it was not immediately clear if it was the data or voice recorder.
The airport has been the focus of security concerns in the past. Security lapses came under sharp criticism in 2004, after Chechen suicide bombers destroyed two airliners that took off from the airport on the same evening, killing a total of 90 people. A 2011 bombing in the arrivals area killed 37 people.
Investigators also conducted a search at the airline’s main office in Saratov, reports said.
Russia’s Investigative Committee said all possible causes were being considered. Some reports suggested there were questions about whether the plane had been properly de-iced. Moderate snow was falling in much of Moscow at the time of the crash.
Airline spokeswoman Elena Voronova told the state news agency RIA Novosti that one of the pilots had more than 5000 hours of flying time, 2800 of them in an An148. The other pilot had 812 hours of experience, largely in that model plane.
Tass said the plane entered service in 2010 for a different airline, but was held out of service for two years because of a parts shortage. It resumed flying in 2015 and joined Saratov’s fleet a year ago.
TV footage from the crash site showed airplane fragments lying in the snow. Reports said the pieces were strewn over an area about a kilometre wide.
A plane can disappear from radar when it gets too close to the ground to reflect radar signals.
John Cox, a former airline pilot and now a United States-based safety consultant, said the disappearance could also indicate that the jet’s transponder lost power.
``That says potential of engine failure or a technical problem,’' Cox said.
President Vladimir Putin put off a planned trip to Sochi to monitor the investigation. He was to meet today with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas at the Black Sea resort, where Putin has an official residence. Instead, Abbas will meet with Putin in Moscow in the latter part of today, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
The An-148 was developed by Ukraine’s Antonov company in the early 2000s and manufactured in both Ukraine and Russia.