Daily Dispatch

Air disaster kills 71 in Russia

Passenger plane crashes in heavy snow after take-off

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INVESTIGAT­ORS scoured the scene yesterday after a passenger plane crashed near Moscow minutes after take-off, killing all 71 people on board, in one of Russia’s worst-ever plane crashes.

The site of the crash was enveloped in heavy snow that was waist-high in places, making it difficult to access, with emergency workers forced to reach the wreckage by foot and use snowmobile­s.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee said it would consider explanatio­ns for the crash including human error, technical failure and weather conditions, as the country has experience­d record snowfall in recent weeks. It did not mention the possibilit­y of terrorism.

The Antonov An-148 plane went down in the Ramensky district around 70km southeast of Moscow after taking off from Domodedovo airport in the Russian capital and disappeari­ng off the radar at 2.28pm on Sunday.

“Sixty-five passengers and six crew members were on board, and all of them died,” Russia’s office of transport investigat­ions said.

A Swiss citizen and a citizen of Azerbaijan were among the fatalities on a list released by the emergency services ministry.

Three children also died – including a five-year-old girl.

The flight was operated by the domestic Saratov Airlines and was headed for Orsk, a city in the Ural mountains.

Around 100 investigat­ors and criminolog­ists were working at the scene, the Investigat­ive Committee, which investigat­es major incidents, said yesterday.

The emergency services ministry said at least one of the two black boxes had been found.

With wreckage of the plane spread over more than 30ha around the crash site, it will take a week to inspect the whole area, the emergency services ministry said.

More than 900 people using equipment including drones were involved in the search operation, which has been reclassifi­ed as looking for bodies rather than survivors, the ministry said.

“We plan to carry out the main stage of the search operation in seven days because the plane debris is scattered over a very large area,” emergency services minister Vladimir Puchkov said at the scene, quoted by Interfax news agency, adding that “heavy snow” hampered searchers.

“We walked about 600 to 700m across a field, with snow in places waist-deep,” said Alexei Besedin, one of the first rescuers to reach the scene, quoted by the emergency services ministry.

“I felt a shock wave,” Maria, a resident of a village near the crash site. “The windows shook,” she said.

The transport investigat­ions office said the plane disappeare­d from radar screens several minutes after take-off. The Russian-made plane was reportedly seven years old and bought by Saratov Airlines from another Russian airline a year ago.

Saratov Airlines was founded in the 1930s and flies to 35 Russian cities. Its hub is Saratov Central Airport in southern Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin offered “his profound condolence­s to those who lost their relatives in the crash”, his spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Putin – who is running for reelection in a March 18 poll – cancelled plans to travel to the Black Sea resort of Sochi to meet with Palestinia­n leader Mahmud Abbas. Instead, the meeting was to take place in Moscow.

The governor of the Orenburg region, where the plane was heading, told media that “more than 60 people” on board the plane were from the region.

The region declared yesterday a day of mourning with flags lowered and entertainm­ent events cancelled.

With a population of 237 000 people, Orsk is the second biggest city in the Orenburg region, near Russia’s border with Kazakhstan.

Russia has suffered numerous plane crashes, with airlines often operating ageing aircraft in dangerous flying conditions.

A light aircraft crashed in November in Russia’s far east, killing six people on board.

In December 2016, a military plane carrying Russia’s famed Red Army Choir crashed after taking off from Sochi, killing all 92 people on board.

The choir had been due to give a concert to Russian troops in Syria.

Pilot error was blamed for that crash.

In March 2016, all 62 passengers died when a Fly Dubai jet crashed in bad weather during an aborted landing at Rostov-on-Don airport. —

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? CRASH SITE: A man shows debris at the site of plane crash that killed 71 passengers in Ramensky district, near Moscow at the weekend
Picture: AFP CRASH SITE: A man shows debris at the site of plane crash that killed 71 passengers in Ramensky district, near Moscow at the weekend

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