The Post

Airliner crashes in northern Mexico

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An Aeromexico jetliner crashed while taking off during a severe storm in northern Mexico yesterday, smacking down in a field nearly intact then catching fire, and officials said it appeared everyone on board escaped the flames.

Durango state Governor Jose Aispuro initially wrote in his Twitter account that ‘‘it is confirmed there were no fatalities in the accident,’’ but he later said authoritie­s were checking the plane’s burned-out hull to make sure no-one had been trapped.

Aispuro said 49 people had been hospitalis­ed. He said some passengers got out under their own power, and some even wandered back to the nearby airport of Durango city to seek out relatives.

The state civil defence office published photos of a burning but relatively intact plane lying on its belly in a field. Ambulances lined up at the accident site to ferry the injured to hospitals.

Officials and witnesses differed on whether the plane either fell shortly after takeoff or ran off the runway without really gaining altitude. But they agreed the plane was trying to take off during a storm, with some describing marble-sized hail.

Israel Solano Mejia, director of the Durango city civil defence agency, said that the plane ‘‘made it off the ground, but fell nosefirst’’ just a few hundred yards from the end of the runway.

‘‘The nose took the hit. The most seriously injured is the pilot,’’ Solano Mejia said. However, he said, ‘‘the majority of passengers left (the plane) under their own power.’’

Gerardo Ruiz Eparza, head of Mexico’s Transport Department, said there were 97 passengers and four crew members aboard the Embraer 190. The plane has a capacity of 100 passengers.

The federal Transport Department office said in a press statement that the airplane ‘‘suffered an accident moments after takeoff,’’ but gave no informatio­n on the possible cause.

Aeromexico said the flight was AM2431 from Durango to Mexico City. The web site Planespott­ers.net said the Brazilian-made medium-range Embraer 190 was about 10 years old and had seen service with two other airlines before joining the Aeromexico fleet. –

 ?? AP ?? Rescue workers carry an injured person on a stretcher, right, as airline workers, left, walk away from the site where an Aeromexico airliner crashed in a field near the airport in Durango.
AP Rescue workers carry an injured person on a stretcher, right, as airline workers, left, walk away from the site where an Aeromexico airliner crashed in a field near the airport in Durango.

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