Cypriot plane crash kills 121, 48 children (AP) Updated: 2005-08-15 06:40
GRAMMATIKO, Greece - A Cypriot plane full of vacationers slammed into a
mountainside north of Athens on Sunday after at least one pilot lost
consciousness from lack of oxygen, killing all 121 people aboard, more than a
third of them children, AP reported.
Rescuers walk by the tail of a Cypriot Helios
Airways jet near the coastal town of Grammatikos, about 40 kilometers (25
miles) north of Athens, Greece on Aug. 14 2005. The jet with 115
passengers and six crew members on board crashed Sunday north of Athens,
the Defense Ministry and fire department said, and it was not clear if the
pilots were conscious or at the controls when it went down. Helios Airways
is a privately owned Cypriot airline. [AP] | The
cause of Greece's deadliest plane crash appeared to be technical failure —
resulting in high-altitude decompression — and not terrorism, authorities said.
A transport official said the 115 passengers and six crew may have been dead
when the plane went down.
Helios Airways flight ZU522 was headed from Larnaca, Cyprus, to Athens
International Airport when it crashed at 12:05 p.m. near Grammatiko, a scenic
village 25 miles north of the Greek capital. Flaming debris, luggage and bits of
human remains were strewn across two ravines and surrounding hills.
Family members wept in anguish as they waited at the Athens and Larnaca
airports. When news of the crash emerged at Larnaca, relatives swarmed the
airline counters, shouting "murderers" and "you deserve lynching."
A man whose cousin was a passenger told Greece's Alpha television he received
a cell-phone text message minutes before the crash. "He told me the pilots were
unconscious. ... He said: "Farewell, cousin, here we're frozen," Sotiris Voutas
said — indicating the plane was cold, a sign of decompression.
About a half-hour after takeoff, pilots reported air-conditioning system
problems to Cyprus air traffic control. Within minutes, after entering Greek air
space over the Aegean, the Boeing 737 lost all radio contact. Two Greek F-16
fighter jets were dispatched soon afterward.
|
| | Japanese PM launches general election campaign | | | | | Katrina slams US Gulf Coast, oil rigs adrift | | | | | Japan's 6 parties square off in TV debate | | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Today's
Top News |
|
|
|
Top World
News |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|