The National - News

A LONG TIME COMING

First victims found in wreck of aircraft with 120 on board

- Agence France-Presse

Moroccan jawbone study finds Homo sapiens to be 100,000 years older than was first thought,

SAN HLAN // Hundreds of people gathered on a beach in southern Myanmar yesterday, waiting for news of their loved ones as the first bodies were recovered from the wreck of a military plane that crashed with more than 120 people on board.

Navy ships and air force planes have been scouring the sea since Wednesday afternoon, when the aircraft disappeare­d en route from the southern city of Myeik to the commercial hub of Yangon.

By mid- afternoon, the commander- in- chief’s office said 29 bodies – 20 women, one man and eight children – had been pulled from the sea after a navy vessel discovered wreckage from the plane off the coastline near the town of Dawei.

Hundreds of locals, relatives and non-government organisati­on workers clasping umbrellas watched as a fishing boat laden with the dead pulled up to San Hlan beach, where bodies were unloaded by workers and uniformed soldiers wearing masks and gloves.

Twenty-nine corpses wrapped in black-and-white plastic bags were taken ashore from the boat.

“My cousin’s sister’s family was in the plane crash – her husband, her child and herself,” said Kyaw Swar Myint, 44, from Dawei.

“We heard news that the helicopter was now transporti­ng about 20 dead bodies to the beach, so we are waiting here.”

A military officer said strong currents have made it hard for boats to reach the shore, which means many of the bodies may have to be airlifted to land.

The Chinese-made Shaanxi Y8 plane was carrying 122 people when it disappeare­d on Wednesday during a routine flight, according to the army chief.

More than half of the passengers were military family members, and included 15 children, the army chief’s office said. Thirty-five soldiers and 14 crew members were also on board.

Some were travelling for medical check-ups or to study in Yangon.

India’s prime minister Narendra Modi offered to help in recovery efforts.

It is monsoon season in Myanmar, but there were no major storms reported along the aircraft’s flight path on the day of the crash.

The military said the plane was flying at more than 18,000 feet when it lost contact with air traf- fic control at 1.35pm, about half an hour after take-off. Gerry Soejatman, an independen­t aviation expert based in Jakarta, said the informatio­n indicated something went wrong “not long after or just before reaching cruising altitude”.

The military named the captain as “seasoned” pilot Lt Col Nyein Chan, who it said had more than 3,000 hours of flying experience.

He was flying the four-engine Y8 turboprop – a medium-range transport plane based on the Soviet Antonov An-12, which has had numerous crashes over the decades. Myanmar’s former junta bought several Y8s during their 50 years of isolated rule, when they were squeezed by western sanctions.

 ?? Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters ?? Soldiers carry the bodies of victims outside Launglon township, Myanmar.
Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters Soldiers carry the bodies of victims outside Launglon township, Myanmar.

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