At least eight dead in Afghan plane crash (AP) Updated: 2005-11-12 10:08
A Pakistani-owned plane carrying cargo for the U.S.-led coalition crashed
into mountains near Afghanistan's capital Friday, killing at least eight people,
officials said.
A police commander at the crash site said there were no survivors, but
officials differed on how many people had been on board.
Lt. Col. Cristoni Riccar, a spokesman for NATO's International Security
Assistance Force, said 10 people were on board but could not immediately give
their nationalities.
Aijaz Faizi, manager of Pakistan-based Royal Airlines, which owned the
20-year-old Russian-made Ilyushin 76, said there were only eight: five Russians,
two Ukrainians and a Pakistani.
The reason for the discrepancy was not immediately clear.
Afghan villagers walk at the site of a plane
crash around 30 kilometers (19 miles) northwest of Kabul, Afghanistan,
Friday, Nov. 11, 2005.[AP] | Five bodies have been recovered, said Ghulam Rasool, a police commander at
the crash site near Bagram, the U.S.-led coalition's headquarters.
"They are in many pieces," he said.
Bad weather may have played a role in the crash, Rasool said, holding up a
piece of the wreckage. Clouds hung low over the area as rescuers searched for
bodies.
Several villagers said they saw the four-engine plane slam into the
mountainside.
"The plane was swaying from side to side and flying very low," said Malang, a
50-year-old farmer who only uses only name. "There was no smoke coming from it.
It then slammed into the mountain. There was such a loud bang and then flames
shot everywhere."
But another witness, Farid Zia, said he saw flames coming from one of the
plane's wings before it crashed.
Some children carried away chunks of the plane's fuselage, Russian magazines
and Russian rubles that were scattered about.
The plane was flying from Kabul to Bagram, a distance of about 18 miles.
Lt. Col. Jerry O'Hara, a U.S. military spokesman at Bagram, said the plane
was carrying cargo for the coalition, either communication equipment or food.
Faizi said the plane had flown from Bahrain to Kabul before taking off for
Bagram.
Both Bagram and Kabul are surrounded by mountains. Flights into the area are
often canceled when weather is bad.
There have been a string of aircraft crashes in Afghanistan this year, mostly
of military helicopters.
On Feb. 3, a plane belonging to Kam Air, Afghanistan's only private airline,
crashed in mountains near Kabul due to bad weather, killing all 104 people on
board.
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