The Commercial Appeal

Pakistan jet crashes with nearly 100 aboard

Pilot reports engine trouble before wreck Sara M Moniuszko and Morgan Hines

- USA TODAY

A domestic Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines flight with at least 98 people on board crashed Friday shortly after 2 p.m. local time near its destinatio­n in the southern port city of Karachi, Abdul Sattar Kokhar, a spokesman for the country’s civil aviation authority, told The Associated Press.

The authority said the plane carried 91 passengers and a crew of seven.

At least 57 bodies were recovered, health department officials said, and PIA chairman Arshad Malik said finding all the dead could take two to three days. Two deceased passengers have already been identified by their DNA and returned to family members, said Meeran Yousaf, a Health Department spokesman for Sindh Province.

At least two people aboard survived, according to the Sindh provincial health department.

And three additional people on the ground were injured.

Malik confirmed that one of the survivors was Zafar Masud, the head of the Bank of Punjab.

The Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines jet, an Airbus A320, plowed into and destroyed at least five houses in a poor and heavily congested residentia­l area on the edge of the airport, known as Model Colony.

Major Gen. Babar Iftikhar, the chief media officer for Pakistan’s Armed Forces, said in a tweet that the army’s chief of staff had volunteere­d to assist the civil administra­tion’s rescue efforts.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan said he was “shocked & saddened” by the crash in a statement posted to Twitter Friday.

“Immediate inquiry will be instituted. Prayers & condolence­s go to families of the deceased,” the statement continued.

Science Minister Fawad Ahmed Chaudhry said this year has been a “catastroph­e – just survival is so difficult,” with the pandemic and now the plane crash.

Most of the passengers were heading home to celebrate the Eid-al Fitr holiday, he said.

“What is most unfortunat­e and sad is whole families have died, whole families who were traveling together for the

Eid holiday,” he said in a telephone interview in the capital of Islamabad.

Witnesses said the plane appeared to attempt to land two or three times before crashing in a residentia­l area near Jinnah Internatio­nal Airport, also known as Karachi Airport.

A transmissi­on of the pilot’s final exchange with air traffic control, posted on the website Liveatc.net, indicated he had failed to land and was circling around to make another attempt.

“We are proceeding direct, sir – we have lost engine,” a pilot said.

“Confirm your attempt on belly,” the air traffic controller said, offering a runway.

“Sir – mayday, mayday, mayday, mayday Pakistan 8303,” the pilot said before the transmissi­on ended.

Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

 ?? RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Firefighters douse the wreckage of a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines aircraft after it crashed in Karachi on Friday.
RIZWAN TABASSUM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Firefighters douse the wreckage of a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines aircraft after it crashed in Karachi on Friday.

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