Orlando Sentinel

An Iranian

- By Nasser Karimi and Jon Gambrell

commercial airplane brought back into service only months ago after being grounded for seven years crashes, and officials say they fear all 65 on board were killed.

TEHRAN, Iran — An Iranian commercial airplane brought back into service only months ago after being grounded for seven years crashed Sunday in a foggy, mountainou­s region of southern Iran, and officials said they feared all 65 people on board were killed.

The crash of the Aseman Airlines ATR-72 marks yet another fatal aviation disaster for Iran, which for years was barred from buying airplane parts for needed maintenanc­e due to Western sanctions over its contested nuclear program.

Its nuclear accord with world powers allows it to get those parts and the country has made deals worth tens of billions of dollars for new aircraft. However, President Donald Trump’s refusal to recertify the deal has injected uncertaint­y into those sales while Iranians still fly in aging aircraft.

The ATR-72, a twinengine turboprop used for short-distance regional flying, went down near its destinatio­n of the southern Iranian city of Yasuj, some 485 miles south of the Iranian capital, Tehran, where it took off.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what caused the crash, although weather was severe in the area. Dense fog, high winds and heavy snow in the Zagros Mountains made it impossible for rescue crews in helicopter­s to reach the site Sunday, state television reported.

Aseman Airlines spokesman Mohammad Taghi Tabatabai told state TV that all on board Flight EP3704 were killed. Those on board included 59 passengers and six crew members, the state-run IRNA news agency reported Sunday night.

“After searching the area, we learned that unfortunat­ely our dear passengers had lost their lives,” Tabatabai said.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Hassan Rouhani offered their condolence­s.

Tabatabai said the plane crashed into Mount Dena, which is about 14,435 feet tall. The plane’s last signal, at 12:35 a.m. EST, showed it at 16,975 feet and descending, according to airplanetr­acking website FlightRada­r24. The pilot was in contact with the tower 14 miles from the airport, state TV said.

One previous passenger on the route posted a video Sunday showing that the flight typically comes in just over the mountain peaks. Aeronautic­al charts for the airport warn pilots to keep an altitude of 15,000 feet in the area. The airport itself is at nearly 6,000 feet.

Locals described hearing the crash, although no one had found the crash site yet, according to state TV.

Aseman Airlines, owned by Iran’s civil service pension foundation, is a semiprivat­e air carrier headquarte­red in Tehran that specialize­s in flights to remote airfields across the country. It also flies internatio­nally.

Aseman Airlines is Iran’s third-largest airline by fleet size, behind state carrier Iran Air and Mahan Air. However, it is banned from flying in the European Union over safety concerns.

The carrier has 29 aircraft, including six ATR aircraft, according to FlightRada­r24. The ATR-72 that crashed Sunday had been built in 1993, Aseman Airlines CEO Ali Abedzadeh told state TV.

On Instagram, Aseman Airlines highlighte­d the doomed aircraft in October, saying it had been “grounded” for seven years but would be “repaired and will be operationa­l after checking and testing.” It wasn’t clear what led to the grounding, though Iran only recently regained access to the airplane parts market after the nuclear deal.

European airplane manufactur­er ATR, a Francebase­d partnershi­p of Airbus and Italy’s Leonardo SpA., said it had no immediate informatio­n about the crash.

Aseman Airlines has suffered other major crashes with fatalities. In October 1994, a twin-propeller Fokker F-28 1000 commuter plane operated by the airline crashed near Natanz, 180 miles south of Tehran, also killing 66 people on board. An Aseman Airlines chartered flight in August 2008, flown by an Itek Air Boeing 737, crashed in Kyrgyzstan, killing 74 people.

 ?? ATTA KENARE/GETTY-AFP ?? Relatives of passengers aboard Aseman Airlines Flight EP3704 gather Sunday near Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport.
ATTA KENARE/GETTY-AFP Relatives of passengers aboard Aseman Airlines Flight EP3704 gather Sunday near Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport.

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