Dozens survive Nigerian plane crash (AP) Updated: 2005-10-23 19:59
A passenger jet carrying 117 people crashed shortly after takeoff from
Nigeria's largest city, but more than half of those onboard survived, officials
said Sunday after search teams reached the wreckage.
A Bellview Airlines air plane seen just before
takeoff at the airport in the city of Lagos, Nigeria, Sunday, Oct. 23,
2005. A passenger plane similar to this one carrying 117 people crashed
shortly after takeoff from Nigeria's biggest city and President Olusegun
Obasanjo called on the country's people to pray for the passengers and
their families, officials said Sunday.
[AP] | The Boeing 737, which was en route to
the capital, Abuja, lost contact with the control tower five minutes after
taking off from the international airport in Lagos at 8:45 p.m. on Saturday,
said Jide Ibinola, a spokesman for the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria.
The flight is popular among Nigerians and expatriates shuttling between the
two cities.
"More than half of those on board survived," said Abilola Oloko, a spokesman
for Oyo state, the site of the crash. Oloko urged "all medical personnel to
proceed to the crash scene, if they can."
Search teams located the downed aircraft, operated by Nigerian-run Bellview
Airlines, near the town of Kishi, 120 miles north of Lagos, police Spokesman
Bode Ojajuni said.
Representatives of many countries gathered at the airport to find out if any
of their citizens were on board the flight.
The airline said 117 people were on board — 111 passengers and six crew
members.
Ibinola said the craft was headed to Abuja, on what was supposed to have been
a 50-minute flight. There was no immediate indication the crash was
terrorism-related.
President Olusegun Obasanjo's office said in a statement that the leader was
personally overseeing search and rescue operations and that he was "asks all
Nigerians to pray for all those aboard the plane and their families."
Bellview, one of about a dozen local airlines, is a privately owned Nigerian
company that operates a fleet of mostly Boeing 737s on internal routes and
throughout West Africa. Bellview first began flying about 10 years ago and has
not suffered a crash before.
In May 2002, an EAS Airlines jet — another domestic carrier — plowed into a
heavily populated neighborhood after takeoff at the airport outside the northern
city of Kano, killing 154 people in the plane and on the ground.
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