Chattanooga Times Free Press

Scores dead in plane crash in Kathmandu

- BY JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

KATHMANDU, Nepal — A passenger plane from Bangladesh slammed into an empty field and erupted in flames just beyond the runway at the airport in Nepal’s capital on Monday, and officials said at least 49 of the 71 people on board had died.

Huge, dark gray columns of smoke uncoiled from the field as rescuers dashed into the crumpled fuselage and tried to pull out as many people as they could.

“The Nepali people were saying, ‘Bachaau, bachaau’” which means ‘Save me, save me,’” said Balkrishna Upadhyay, an army rescuer. “The Bangladesh­is were screaming out in English: ‘Help me, please help me.”’

“It was horrible,” Upadhyay said.

I was in the capital, Kathmandu, maybe 3 miles away, reporting a story about migration, when the plane went down. I rushed to the airport with Bhadra Sharma, a Nepali journalist. Just outside the gates, we clambered up a pile of gravel and watched fire engines spray water onto the burning plane.

A firefighte­r invited us and some Nepali photojourn­alists to jump into the back of his pickup truck and we raced right up to the crash site. It smelled like burning plastic, very toxic.

The grass was flattened and blackened, scattered with torn papers, shredded seats, pieces of mangled foam and one metal water bottle lying on its own. A few big pieces of the plane, including the tail, were still intact and smoking, but most of it had burned up.

A long row of yellow body bags lay in the burned grass. Police officers did their best to keep the bodies covered, but a charred limb poked out of an open bag.

The plane, US-Bangla Airlines Flight 211, was landing at Tribhuvan Internatio­nal Airport in Kathmandu on a flight from Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, when it crashed at 2:15 p.m. Witnesses said it was wobbling in the air and seemed unbalanced as it approached.

Several airport workers we spoke to said it had overshot the runway by about 150 feet, nose-diving into the deserted field just beyond the airport fence. A few minutes later, while the first batch of rescuers was pulling panicked passengers out of the front of the plane, an intense fire burst out at the back.

“It sounded like a bomb went off,” said Kailash Adhikari, a driver for a fuel company working at the airport. He said it took 15 minutes for firefighte­rs to extinguish the flames. If the firefighte­rs had arrived faster, several rescue crew members told us, more people could have been saved.

Nepali police officials said the flight was carrying 67 passengers and four crew members. Forty-nine people were confirmed dead and 22 were injured, many in critical condition, said Manoj Neupane, a spokesman for the national police.

The cause of the crash was not clear, officials said, though the air Monday was especially hazy. I had flown into that airport a few hours before the crash, and the skies were choked with dust and smog.

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