San Francisco Chronicle

Black boxes badly damaged in crash

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ROSTOV- ON- DON, Russia — Aviation experts began examining the black boxes Sunday from the FlyDubai flight that crashed amid high winds at an airport in southern Russia, killing all 62 aboard.

FlyDubai’s Boeing 737- 800 from Dubai nosedived and exploded in a giant fireball before dawn Saturday after trying to land for a second time in strong winds in the Russian city of Rostov- onDon. FlyDubai confirmed that all on board the plane were killed. Most of the passengers were Russian.

Several planes had trouble landing at the airport at the time of the crash.

Sergei Zaiko, deputy chairman of the InterState Aviation Committee, told Russia’s Channel One that experts were looking Sunday at the data recorders, which were delivered to Moscow earlier in the day.

The committee that investigat­es plane crashes in much of the former Soviet Union said in a statement that the devices had been severely damaged. But Sergei Zaiko, deputy chairman of the committee, was quoted by Russian news agencies late Sunday as saying that the quality of material on the data recorder was nonetheles­s high.

The black boxes were being viewed by experts from Russia, the United Arab Emirates and France, the aviation commission said. The Americanma­de Boeing plane had French- made engines.

At Rostov- on- Don, hundreds of people flocked Sunday to the airport, the region’s largest, to lay flowers and leave candles and toys in memory of the dead. The city is 600 miles south of Moscow near the Ukrainian border.

Closed- circuit TV footage showed the plane going down at a steep angle and exploding. The powerful explosion left a large crater in the runway.

The airport remained closed, but workers were repairing the damage to the runway Sunday afternoon and planned to reopen it Monday morning, the airport said in a statement.

FlyDubai’s chief executive, Ghaith al- Ghaith, said Sunday that the plane had enough fuel to maintain its holding pattern, which reportedly went on for two hours before pilots attempted to land the aircraft. He expressed confidence in Russian authoritie­s and said the carrier intends to resume flights to the airport once it reopens.

He reiterated that the Rostov- on- Don airport was open Saturday despite the high winds and was “good enough to operate” at the time of the crash and that it was up to Russian authoritie­s to make that determinat­ion.

Some of the crash victims were from rebel- held areas in eastern Ukraine where fighting between Russia- backed separatist­s and Ukrainian government troops has killed more than 9,100 people in nearly two years. The war has turned the region’s main airport of Donetsk into a wasteland, and many locals have been using the airport in Rostovon- Don.

Self- proclaimed rebel authoritie­s in Donetsk said Sunday that two residents had been killed in the crash, while the Komsomolsk­aya Pravda daily reported that a family of three from the rebelcontr­olled town of Sverdlovsk in Ukraine was among the victims.

 ?? Vasily Maximov / AFP / Getty Images ?? A woman lays flowers in tribute to the 62 people who died when a FlyDubai jetliner nose- dived and crashed Saturday in the Russian city of Rostov- on- Don.
Vasily Maximov / AFP / Getty Images A woman lays flowers in tribute to the 62 people who died when a FlyDubai jetliner nose- dived and crashed Saturday in the Russian city of Rostov- on- Don.

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