Los Angeles Times

Airplane crash kills 71 in Russia

The airliner disappeare­d from radar screens minutes after takeoff from Moscow.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — A Russian passenger jet crashed shortly after taking off from one of Moscow’s major airports Sunday, killing all 71 people aboard.

The plane, an Antonov An-148 passenger airliner operated by Saratov Airlines, was carrying 65 passengers and six crew members when it left Moscow’s Domodedovo Airport for Orsk, a city about 1,000 miles southeast of the capital near the Kazakhstan border.

Investigat­ors said the plane took off at 2:21 p.m. and reached an altitude of 6,400 feet before disappeari­ng from radar screens about four minutes after takeoff, Russia’s Tass news agency reported, citing the Moscow interregio­nal transport prosecutor’s office.

The wreckage of the aircraft was found about 25 miles south of the airport in the Ramenskoye district. Television reports showed investigat­ors searching in a snow-covered field. The images showed pieces of the wreckage spread out across what investigat­ors said was about a half-mile radius. One flight recorder was found, Tass reported, but the news agency did not specify whether it was a voice or data recorder.

Russian investigat­ors said they were not ruling out weather conditions, a crew error or a technical malfunctio­n as a possible cause of the crash.

Moscow and the surroundin­g regions have been hit by several heavy snowstorms this month, including one that left the Russian capital with more than 22 inches of snow in less than 36 hours. There was light snow and fog in the Moscow region Sunday.

President Vladimir Putin ordered a special commission to investigat­e the plane crash, according to his spokesman, Dmitry Peskov. Putin postponed a trip to the southern resort city of Sochi on Sunday to oversee the response to the crash, Peskov told reporters.

The White House issued a statement saying it was “deeply saddened” by the disaster.

The Antonov plane was built in 2010 and had been in service since July of that year by Rossiya Airlines, a subsidiary of Aeroflot, Russia’s f lagship airline. Saratov Airlines, a regional airline operating the flight from Moscow to Orsk, said the plane was out of service for two years from 2015 until February 2017 while waiting for new parts, according to Russian news agencies. Saratov Airlines said there were no complaints about the plane prior to takeoff Sunday.

The An-148 jet was designed by Ukraine’s Antonov company. The plane is manufactur­ed in both Ukraine and Russia. Sunday’s plane was built at the Voronezh Aircraft Building Assn. in southern Russia, Tass reported.

Russia is considerin­g grounding its entire An-148 fleet until the cause of the crash is determined, Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov said, according to Tass.

The regional governor of Orenburg, where the city of Orsk is located, confirmed that at least 60 of the passengers were from that region. Three children were among those killed. Most of the crew was based in Saratov, about 500 miles southeast of Moscow, Russian news agencies reported.

Three foreigners were reportedly killed on the plane, including one Swiss citizen. The other two foreign passengers’ nationalit­ies were not immediatel­y known.

The plane crash dominated television reports Sunday night, with two of the state channels canceling entertainm­ent programmin­g to run coverage of the crash. Reports included live images of the airport in Orsk, where families were seen crying as they waited for news of their loved ones.

 ?? Life.ru ?? THE WRECKAGE of a passenger jet lies in a village about 25 miles from Moscow’s Domodedovo Airport.
Life.ru THE WRECKAGE of a passenger jet lies in a village about 25 miles from Moscow’s Domodedovo Airport.
 ?? Orsk.ru ?? DISTRAUGHT family and friends of passengers on the crashed Saratov Airlines f light gather at an airport in Orsk, Russia, the airliner’s intended destinatio­n.
Orsk.ru DISTRAUGHT family and friends of passengers on the crashed Saratov Airlines f light gather at an airport in Orsk, Russia, the airliner’s intended destinatio­n.

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