The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)
At least 45 killed after military plane crashes
A Philippine military plane has crashed while landing, killing at least 42 soldiers on board and three civilians on the ground, while at least 49 people were rescued from the burning wreckage, officials said.
Some soldiers were seen jumping from the Lockheed C-130 Hercules before it crashed and exploded on the periphery of Jolo airport in Sulu province, military officials said.
Three of seven villagers who were hit on the ground have died. Defence secretary Delfin Lorenzana said rescue and recovery efforts were ongoing.
The aircraft had 96 people on board, the military said, adding five soldiers remained unaccounted for by nightfall. The pilots survived but were seriously injured, officials added. The Philippine government has struggled for years to modernise its military, one of Asia’s least equipped, as it dealt with decades-long Muslim and communist insurgencies and territorial rifts with China and other claimant countries in the South China Sea.
The plane was one of two ex-US Air Force aircraft handed to the Philippines as part of military assistance this year. It crashed while landing shortly before noon yesterday in Bangkal village in the mountainous town of Patikul, military chief of staff General Cirilito Sobejana said.
Initial pictures released by the military showed the tail section of the cargo plane relatively intact. The other parts of the plane were burned or scattered in pieces in a clearing surrounded by trees. Soldiers and other rescuers with stretchers were seen dashing to and from the smoke-shrouded crash site.
The plane was transporting troops, many of them new soldiers who had just undergone basic training, from Cagayan de Oro city for deployment in Sulu, officials said.
“They were supposed to join us in our fight against terrorism,” Sulu military commander Major General William Gonzales said.
Government forces have been battling Abu Sayyaf militants in the predominantly Muslim province of Sulu for decades.