The Pak Banker

Plane crashes into building near Milan; all 8 aboard die

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A small, single-engine plane carrying six passengers and two crew crashed Sunday into a vacant twostory office building in a Milan suburb, and authoritie­s said all eight people aboard died. Investigat­ors opened a probe into what caused the private plane to crash shortly after takeoff from Milan's Linate Airport en route to Olbia Airport on the Italian island of Sardinia. A thick column of dark smoke rose from the crash site and was visible for kilometers. Several parked cars nearby went up in flames.

Firefighte­rs tweeted that no one else but those on board were hurt in the early afternoon crash near a subway station in San Donato Milanese, a small town near Milan.

Milan Prosecutor

Tiziana Siciliano told reporters at the scene that the plane was proceeding on its flight until "a certain point, then an anomaly appeared on the radar screen and it plunged," striking the building's roof. Control tower officials reported the anomaly, she said, but further details on that weren't immediatel­y given.

The prosecutor said the plane didn't send out any alarm. It was too early to cite any possible cause for the crash, Siciliano said, adding that the flight recorder has been retrieved.

By early evening, only two of the eight dead had been identified, since they carried documents on them, Siciliano said.

Those aboard were "all foreigners," she said, including the pilot, who was Romanian. The aircraft was registered in Romania, the prosecutor said.

Later, the Romanian Foreign Ministry said two Romanians with dual citizenshi­p were among the dead. Italian news reports said the pilot, 30, also had German citizenshi­p. A second victim was a Romanian woman in her 60s who also held French citizenshi­p, the reports said.

The reports said the aircraft had flown from Bucharest, Romania, to Milan on Sept. 30 with no apparent problem.

The Italian news agency ANSA quoted the national air safety agency ANSV as saying "the plane hit the building and started burning." It said the aircraft was a PC-12, a singleengi­ne, executive-type plane. Fire officials said earlier that the aircraft had crashed into the building's facade.

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