The Herald (South Africa)

66 feared dead in Iran crash

Rescue workers battle to find wreckage of plane in mountains

- Eric Randolph

ALL 66 people on board an Iranian passenger plane were feared dead yesterday after it crashed into the country’s Zagros mountains, with emergency services struggling to locate the wreckage in blizzard conditions.

Aseman Airlines flight EP3704 disappeare­d from radar about 45 minutes after takeoff from Tehran’s Mehrabad airport, the airline’s public relations chief Mohammad Tabatabai told state broadcaste­r IRIB.

It was the third disaster to strike Iran in recent months, after an earthquake killed at least 620 people in Kermanshah in November and 30 Iranian sailors were lost in an oil tanker collision off China’s coast last month.

The ATR-72 twin-engine plane, in service for 25 years, left the capital at about 8am and was heading towards the city of Yasuj, some 500km to the south.

After conflictin­g reports on fatalities and the location of the crash, officials said rescue teams were still not able to find the wreckage.

“We have no access to the spot of the crash and therefore we cannot accurately and definitely confirm the death of all passengers,” Tabatabai told the ISNA news agency.

He said the plane was carrying 60 passengers, including one child, as well as six crew members.

Jalal Pooranfar, regional head for Iran’s emergency services, told ISNA rescue and relief teams had been sent to the possible area of the crash.

“But the helicopter could not continue its path due to snow and blizzard.”

Seyed Noor Mohammad Mousavi, head of the local Red Crescent office, told the IRNA news agency a drone had been dispatched to help find the wreckage. A total of 120 people from 30 different emergency teams were sent to help with the search, another Red Crescent official said.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei sent a message of condolence, saying the news had “left our hearts overwhelme­d with sadness and sorrow”, according to state television.

A man who missed the doomed flight had mixed emotions.

“God has been really kind to me but I am so sad from the bottom of my heart for all those dear ones who lost their lives,” the unnamed man told the Tabnak news agency, which showed a picture of his unused ticket.

Decades of internatio­nal isolation have left Iran’s airlines with ageing fleets of passenger planes which they have struggled to maintain and modernise.

Aseman’s fleet includes at least three ATR-72s that date back to the early 1990s, according to IRNA.

A spokesman for ATR, part-owned by Europe’s Airbus, said the company was researchin­g the details of the crash.

President Hassan Rouhani had ordered the transport ministry to set up a crisis group to investigat­e the crash and coordinate rescue efforts, ISNA said.

Aseman’s three Boeing 727-200s are almost as old as the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution, having made their first flights the following year.

Iran has suffered multiple aviation disasters, most recently in 2014 when a Sepahan Airlines plane crashed, killing 39 people just after take-off from Tehran.

Lifting sanctions on aviation purchases was a key clause in the nuclear deal Iran signed with world powers in 2015.

But if US President Donald Trump chooses to reimpose sanctions in the coming months, as he has threatened to do, there is little hope of change. – AFP

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