The Daily Telegraph

Twenty dead after vintage plane crashes during tour in Swiss Alps

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

TWENTY people were killed when a vintage aircraft operating a sightseein­g flight over Switzerlan­d crashed into the Alps over the weekend.

There were no survivors, Swiss police announced yesterday, as a search and rescue operation was called off.

The historic Junkers Ju-52 propeller plane disappeare­d on Saturday afternoon after taking off from Locarno in southern Switzerlan­d on its way to a military airfield near Zurich.

On board were three crew members and 17 passengers aged between 42 and 84, who had paid for the chance to travel on the Thirties-era aircraft.

Among the passengers were an Austrian couple with their grown-up son. The rest were believed to be Swiss.

The wreckage of the aircraft was found at 8,330ft near Piz Segnas in the remote mountains of eastern Switzerlan­d. “Based on the situation at the crash site, we can say that the aircraft hit the ground almost vertically at a relatively high speed,” Daniel Knecht, head of aviation at the Swiss Accident Investigat­ion Board, said yesterday.

The cause of the accident is unclear, but investigat­ors said they could not rule out a link to the current heatwave in Europe. “What we can rule out at this point is a mid-air collision,” Mr Knecht said. Although the Junckers was almost 80 years old, it was serviced after every 35 hours of flying time and was in good condition after its most recent service at the end of July.

Both pilots were experience­d and had flown for regular civilian airlines and the Swiss air force.

An investigat­ion is likely to be complicate­d and will take considerab­le time as the aircraft was not fitted with a black box or other modern data recording devices. The German-made Junkers Ju-52 was first produced in 1932 and was one of the earliest civilian passenger aircraft.

♦ Two fatal boating accidents in Venice have led to calls to curb speeding in the increasing­ly congested waterways. Renzo Rossi, 59, and Natalino Gavagnin, 63, died when their small fishing boat was struck on Friday night by a jet boat carrying four passengers in their 20s. The next day, Giovanni Rampazzo, 76, drowned after his boat overturned in the wake of a passing vessel.

 ??  ?? Wreckage of the Thirties-era Junkers on a mountainsi­de near Piz Segnas, Switzerlan­d
Wreckage of the Thirties-era Junkers on a mountainsi­de near Piz Segnas, Switzerlan­d

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