USA TODAY International Edition

Search goes on after Chinese plane crash

- Ryan W. Miller Contributi­ng: Dawn Gilbertson, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

Hours after a Chinese airplane carrying 132 people crashed Monday into a mountainou­s area in the southern province of Guangxi, there was no word on the number of dead or injured.

The Boeing 737- 800, operated by China Eastern Airlines, crashed with 123 passengers and nine crew members on board, according to the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China.

The crash sparked a large fire that was extinguish­ed. State media reported late Monday that forecast rain and the mountainou­s terrain at the crash site might complicate search efforts. Only debris from the wreckage had been found, according to rescuers who spoke to state- run Xinhua News Agency.

Chinese President Xi Jinping called for an “all- out effort” in the rescue operations and for any potential safety hazards to be investigat­ed.

The crash occurred near the city of Wuzhou in Teng county. According to aviation officials, the plane was traveling from Kunming in the western province of Yunnan to Guangzhou in the coastal province of Guangdong. The flight took off at 1: 11 p. m. local time and was scheduled to arrive at 3: 05 p. m., but air traffic controller­s lost track of the plane around 2: 15 p. m., according to China Daily.

Data from the flight- tracking website Flightrada­r24. com shows the China Eastern Airlines flight traveling at about 30,000 feet before it suddenly dropped. The airplane was traveling at its cruising altitude speed of 523 mph, according to the data.

Hundreds of firefighters and rescue crews from nearby department­s were dispatched to the scene, according to the state- run China Daily. Video shared by People’s Daily, another state media source, showed smoke billowing from the side of a mountain.

‘ Everyone went to the mountains’

China Daily reported that a village official with the surname Zhou told the Chutian Metropolis Daily newspaper that the plane had “completely disintegra­ted” and that he did not see any remains.

The New York Times reported, citing the state- owned China News Service, that a resident from the village of Molang with the last name Liu rode to the crash site to help with rescue efforts but did not see any remains.

“Everyone went to the mountains,” Tang Min, who operates a restaurant near the site, told the Agence FrancePres­se news agency.

Photos at the airport in Guangzhou, where the plane was to arrive, showed a section set aside for relatives of the people aboard the flight. China Daily reported the airline set up special working groups in its response to the crash, including one dedicated to family assistance.

Boeing 737- 800 involved

China Eastern, based in Shanghai, is one of the country’s top airlines, serving 248 destinatio­ns domestical­ly and internatio­nally.

“The cause of the plane crash is still under investigat­ion, and the company will actively cooperate with relevant investigat­ions,” the airline said in a statement Monday, according to The New York Times. “The company expresses its deep condolence­s to the passengers and crew members who died in the plane crash.”

Boeing said in a statement it was aware of the reports of the crash and “working to gather more informatio­n.”

The Boeing 737- 800 was delivered to China Eastern Airlines in June 2015 and has flown for more than six years. The aircraft debuted in the 1990s, and Boeing has made more than 5,200 of the commercial planes. The company delivered the last of the series to China Eastern in 2020.

State media reported that all of China Eastern’s fleet of 737- 800s were ordered grounded.

In January 2020, Iran’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard accidental­ly shot down a type of 737- 800 flown by Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines. All 176 people on board were killed.

The aircraft is different from the 737 Max model, which was grounded worldwide after two fatal crashes in recent years. China cleared that model of plane to return to service, pending modifications to the aircraft, the South China Morning Post reported. The 737 Max has not flown in China in three years.

China’s most recent previous fatal civilian airline accident occurred in 2010 when a Henan Airlines flight crashed while landing in fog in Yichun in Heilongjia­ng province. Forty- four people were killed, and the pilot was sentenced to three years in prison.

In 2004, a China Eastern flight from Baotou in Inner Mongolia crashed into a lake shortly after takeoff, killing 55 people.

The U. S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion said in a statement Monday it was aware of the reports of the crash. “The agency is ready to assist in investigat­ion efforts if asked,” the FAA said.

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