The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Cuba in mourning after deadly air crash

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HAVANA. — Cuba observed a weekend of national mourning for victims of its worst crash in nearly three decades that killed 110 passengers and crew.

An investigat­ion has been launched into Friday’s crash of the nearly 40-year-old Boeing 737200 leased to the national carrier Cubana de Aviacion by a Mexican company.

Among the people killed were 99 Cubans, the six-person Mexican crew and five foreign passengers — an Argentine couple, a Mexican woman and two people from Western Sahara, according to Cuba’s Transport Minister Adel Yzquierdo. There were five children among the dead.

Three Cuban women survived the crash and are hospitalis­ed in critical condition, according to state media. A medical source told AFP that each of them has undergone at least eight operations.

The Boeing crashed shortly after taking off from Havana, coming down in a field near the airport and sending a thick column of acrid smoke into the air.

The circumstan­ces echoed those of Cubana de Aviacion’s worst air disaster nearly 30 years ago, in September 1989, when an Ilyushin 62 plane crashed on takeoff from Havana as it was headed to Italy. That disaster killed all 126 people on the plane, mainly Italian tourists, as well as around 45 people on the ground.

In Friday’s crash, the plane was on a domestic flight from Havana to the eastern city of Holguin.

The plane was almost completely destroyed in the crash and subsequent fire. What appeared to be one of the aircraft’s wings was wedged among scorched tree trunks, but almost nothing remained of the main fuselage.

Cuba’s Transport Minister Adel Yzquierdo told reporters one of the plane’s two black boxes had been recovered in “good condition,” and the other was likely to be found within hours. Their data will be key to determinin­g what happened.

Built in 1979, the plane was leased from a small Mexican com- pany, Global Air, also known as Aerolineas Damojh.

Mexico said it was sending two civil aviation specialist­s to help in the investigat­ion.

Boeing said a “technical team stands ready to assist” and it offered condolence­s to friends and relatives of the victims.

The mourning period was set to last until midnight yesterday, the Communist Party leader and former president Raul Castro said. Flags were flown at half-mast throughout the country.

Miguel Diaz-Canel, who succeeded Castro as the island’s leader only last month, appeared aghast as he surveyed the recovery efforts, wearing a short-sleeved shirt and surrounded by officials.

He visited the capital’s morgue where the bodies were taken for identifica­tion, and met relatives who were being put up in a city hotel. He also visited the three survivors in hospital.

Castro sent his condolence­s to families bereaved in the “catastroph­ic accident”, a statement read, as Russian President Vladimir Putin and a string of Latin American leaders also expressed sympathy.

Pope Francis asked the church in Cuba to convey condolence­s to families “who mourn the unexpected disappeara­nce of loved ones”. — AFP.

 ??  ?? Miguel Diaz-Canel
Miguel Diaz-Canel

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