Jamaica Gleaner

Scores killed in plane crash

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APLANE carrying 71 people from Bangladesh swerved erraticall­y and flew dangerousl­y low before crashing and erupting in flames as it landed yesterday in Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, killing at least 50 people, officials and witnesses said.

A top airport official said the pilot of US-Bangla Airlines flight BS211 did not follow landing instructio­ns from the control tower, and approached the airport’s one runway from the wrong direction.

“The airplane was not properly aligned with the runway. The tower repeatedly asked if the pilot was OK, and the reply was ‘yes,’” said Raj Kumar Chetri, the airport’s general manager.

But a recording of the conversati­ons between t he pilot and air traffic controller­s indicates confusion over the direction in which the plane should land.

In the recording, posted by the air traffic monitoring website liveatc.net, conversati­on veers repeatedly about whether the pilot should land on the airport’s single runway from the south or the north.

Just before landing, the pilot asks, “Are we cleared to land?”

Moments later, the controller comes back on, using a tone rarely heard in such conversati­ons — perhaps even panic — and tells the pilot: “I say again, turn!”

Seconds later, the controller orders firetrucks onto the runway.

The exact number of dead and injured remained unclear amid the chaos of the crash and the rush of badly injured people to nearby hospitals, but Brig Gen Gokul Bhandari, the Nepal army spokesman, said it was clear that at least 50 people had died. Officials at Kathmandu Medical College, the closest hospital to the airport, said they were treating 16 survivors.

 ?? AP ?? Nepalese rescuers stand near a passenger plane from Bangladesh that crashed at the airport in Kathmandu, Nepal, yesterday.
AP Nepalese rescuers stand near a passenger plane from Bangladesh that crashed at the airport in Kathmandu, Nepal, yesterday.

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