Chattanooga Times Free Press

Workers comb snowy field for clues to crash

- BY VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW — Wading through kneedeep snow, hundreds of emergency workers searched a vast field near Moscow on Monday for remains of the 71 victims from the crash of a Russian airliner, and aviation experts began decipherin­g the jet’s two flight recorders.

Investigat­ors quickly ruled out a terrorist attack in Sunday’s crash of the regional jet bound for Orsk in the southern Urals. The air disaster reignited questions, however, about the twin-engine plane developed jointly by Russia and Ukraine but phased out of production amid the political crisis between the neighbors.

The model has a spotty safety record, with one previous crash and a string of major incidents in which pilots struggled to land safely. The carrier, Saratov Airlines, has grounded several other planes in its fleet pending the crash investigat­ion.

The plane crashed several minutes after taking off from Moscow’s Domodedovo airport, and all 65 passengers and the crew of six were killed when the aircraft hit the ground and exploded in a giant fireball.

The Investigat­ive Committee, Russia’s top agency for looking into such disasters, said before the crash, the plane was intact and there had been no fire on board. Officials would not speculate on possible causes.

The plane’s fuel tanks exploded on impact, gouging a deep crater and scattering wreckage across 74 acres, according to the Emergencie­s Ministry, which used drones to direct the search. Pieces of the plane and human remains were buried in deep snow; some debris was found in nearby trees.

Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich told a Cabinet meeting that emergency teams have found both flight data and cockpit voice recorders, key to determinin­g the cause of the crash. Investigat­ors said they already have started working on them.

President Vladimir Putin put off a planned trip to Sochi and stayed in Moscow to monitor the investigat­ion. The Kremlin said U.S. President Donald Trump called Putin to express his condolence­s.

Officials said the search for victims’ remains will take a week. The passengers ranged in age from 5 to 79, according to a list from the Emergencie­s Ministry. Most victims were from Orsk, where authoritie­s declared Monday to be an official day of mourning.

Saratov Airlines said the jet had received proper maintenanc­e and passed all the necessary checks before the flight. The plane was built in 2010 for a different airline that operated it for several years before putting it in storage. Saratov Airlines commission­ed it last year.

The captain had more than 5,000 hours of flying time, 2,800 of them in an An-148, the airline said. The other pilot had 812 hours of experience, largely in that model.

Another Russian operator that uses the plane, Angara, based in Irkutsk in eastern Siberia, said it will keep flying them. The Defense Ministry and other government agencies that also use the aircraft haven’t grounded them either.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Personnel work at the scene of a plane crash in Stepanovsk­oye village, about 25 miles from the Domodedovo airport, Russia, on Monday. The Russian passenger plane carrying 71 people crashed Sunday near Moscow, killing everyone aboard.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Personnel work at the scene of a plane crash in Stepanovsk­oye village, about 25 miles from the Domodedovo airport, Russia, on Monday. The Russian passenger plane carrying 71 people crashed Sunday near Moscow, killing everyone aboard.

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