The Borneo Post

Ukraine jet crashes in Tehran, killing 176

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TEHRAN: A Ukrainian airliner carrying 176 people from seven countries crashed shortly a er takeoff from Tehran on Wednesday, killing all on board.

The vast majority of the passengers on the Boeing 737 flight from Tehran to Kiev were non-Ukrainians, including 82 Iranians and 63 Canadians, officials said.

The crash occurred with tensions high in the Middle East and shortly a er Tehran launched missiles at bases in Iraq housing US troops. But there was no immediate indication of foul play and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned against “speculatin­g” on the cause of the disaster.

Footage released by Iranian state media showed a field on fire and the smoking wreckage of the crash. Rescue workers carried body bags and the passengers’ personal items -- including cases, clothes, a Santa Claus doll and a boxing glove -- were lying amidst the debris.

Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines (UIA), the ex-Soviet country’s privately owned flagship carrier, said flight PS752 took off from Tehran airport at 6:10 am and disappeare­d from radars just two minutes later.

It slammed into farmland at Khalaj Abad, in Shahriar county, about 45 kilometres (30 miles) northwest of the airport, according to reports on Iranian state media.

Officials in both Iran and Ukraine said there was no hope of anyone having survived.

As well as the Iranians and Canadians, the passengers included 10 Swedes, four Afghans, three Germans and three Britons, Ukraine’s foreign minister said. Eleven Ukrainians -- including the nine crew -- were also on board.

Officials in Tehran said 15 children were among the passengers. The semi-official news agency ISNA said 13 were students from Tehran’s Sharif University, the most prestigiou­s in the country.

The airline -- which suspended its flights to Tehran a er the crash -- said the Boeing 737 had been built in 2016 and checked only two days before the accident.

“The plane was in working order,” UIA company president Yevgeniy Dykhne told a briefing in Kiev where he choked back tears. “It was one of our best planes with a wonderful crew.”

Zelensky, who cut short a vacation to Oman to return to Kiev, ordered an investigat­ion into the crash and a sweeping check of “all civilian aircraft” in the country.

“I ask everyone to keep from speculatin­g and putting forth unconfirme­d theories about the crash,” Zelensky wrote on Facebook.

Iranian state media reported that the plane caught fire a er crashing, but a video aired by the state broadcaste­r appeared to show the plane already on fire as it fell from the night sky.

“There is a lot of speculatio­n at the moment it has been shot down -- I think that is not going to be the case at all,” said Stephen Wright, a professor of aircraft systems at Tampere University in Finland.

“The aircraft was climbing... it was going up in the right direction, which means that something catastroph­ic has happened.

“It could be a bomb or it could be some sort of catastroph­ic breakup of the aircraft.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Rescue teams work at the scene a er a Ukrainian plane carrying 176 passengers crashed near Imam Khomeini airport in the Iranian capital Tehran early in the morning, killing everyone on board.
— AFP photo Rescue teams work at the scene a er a Ukrainian plane carrying 176 passengers crashed near Imam Khomeini airport in the Iranian capital Tehran early in the morning, killing everyone on board.

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