The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Seven Britons among dead in plane crash

AIR DISASTER: Flight bound for Nairobi hits ground shortly after taking off

- SAM BLEWETT

Seven British passengers and one from Ireland were among the 157 people killed when an Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed shortly after take-off, officials have said.

A total of 149 passengers and eight crew members were thought to have been on the Boeing 737-8 MAX plane destined for Nairobi when it hit the ground six minutes after departing Addis Ababa yesterday morning.

Kenya’s transport secretary James Macharia told reporters that he could confirm there were nationals from at least 35 different countries on board, including seven passengers from the UK.

Ethiopian Airlines told a press conference that an Irish citizen was also on board the flight which crashed at about 8.45am, leaving no survivors.

The Irish foreign ministry was supporting a family, while the British ambassador to Ethiopia, Dr Alastair Mcphail, said his team were working hard in response to the “tragic crash”.

The cause of the crash was not yet known. Visibility was clear but air traffic monitor Flightrada­r24 said “vertical speed was unstable after take off”.

The pilot had sent out a distress call and was given the all clear to return, according to the airline’s chief executive Tewolde Gebremaria­m.

Senior captain Yared Getachew had a “commendabl­e performanc­e” having completed more than 8,000 hours in the air, the airline said.

The plane had flown from Johannesbu­rg to Addis earlier yesterday morning, and had undergone a “rigorous” testing on February 4, a statement continued.

Records show the plane was new and delivered to the airline as recently as November.

An eyewitness told the BBC there was an intense fire when the plane crashed.

“The blast and the fire were so strong that we couldn’t get near it,” he said. “Everything is burnt down. There are four helicopter­s at the scene now.”

Mr Gebremaria­m was pictured leafing through what little was left of the wreckage as he visited the freshly ground earth under the blue sky of Ethiopia’s capital.

Minister Therese Coffey said no officials from the department for environmen­t, food and rural affairs (Defra) were on board, though she suspected some of the passengers had been travelling to the UN Environmen­t Assembly in Nairobi.

UK investigat­ors from the Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch are likely to be communicat­ing with their counterpar­ts in Ethiopia to keep next of kin informed.

Many of the passengers were from Kenya, but others were said to be from Italy, France, the US, Canada, Ethiopia, China, Egypt, Germany, Slovakia and India.

 ?? Picture: AP. ?? The crash scene 31 miles south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Picture: AP. The crash scene 31 miles south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

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