BRASILIA, Brazil - Military helicopters lowered a rescue team by rope
Saturday into the remote Amazon jungle site where an airliner slammed into the
ground, but authorities held out little hope of finding survivors among the 155
people on board.
The team began clearing dense vegetation near the wreckage site so a
helicopter could land.
Relatives of passengers of Gol airlines flight 1907 from
Manaus to Brasilia cry while speaking to journalists outside the hotel
where they are awaiting news from the company and aviation authorities on
the condition of the plane and its occupants, at the airport in Brasilia
September 30, 2006. [Reuters]
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"There's
little indication of survivors, but we won't rule out the possibility," Brazil
Air Force Brig. Gen. Antonio Gomes Leite Filho said in a news conference
Saturday evening. "We haven't fully explored the crash scene, it's a very
complicated area."
Officials suspended the search after sundown Saturday, citing difficulties to
access the location at night. They would resume at daybreak Sunday. Filho said
search-and-rescue operations would continue until authorities are sure there are
no survivors.
The president of Brazil's airport authority, Jose Carlos Pereira, said the
Boeing 737-800 jetliner and a private jet clipped each other before the crash of
Gol airlines Flight 1907. He said the Gol flight from the jungle city of Manaus
en route to Brasilia and Rio de Janeiro struck the ground traveling at more than
300 mph.
"At that speed it is highly unlikely any survivors will be found," Pereira
said.
Nobody on the smaller plane, which was carrying a New York Times columnist,
was injured.
Air force helicopter pilots hovering over the crash site saw no signs of an
intact fuselage and the debris appeared to cover only a small area.
If no survivors are found, it would be the deadliest air accident in Brazil's
history. In 1982, a Boeing 727 operated by Brazil's now-defunct Vasp airline
crashed in the northeastern city of Fortaleza, killing 137 people.
The wreckage was found near a cattle ranch, 1,090 miles northwest of Sao
Paulo in the state of Mato Grosso. The manager of the 49,500-acre ranch said the
plane may have crashed inside the neighboring Xingu Indian reservation.
"We heard a loud explosion and some of our employees saw a plane flying low,"
the ranch manager, Milton Picalho, said by phone. "Judging from the direction
the noise came from, I would say it crashed inside the reservation."
Pereira said the jetliner with 149 passengers and six crew may have either
collided with a Brazilian-made Legacy executive jet or the two aircraft may have
grazed each other.
"There was some kind of contact between the two aircraft and it is highly
probable that this was the cause," he said. "But we will only be absolutely
certain after a full investigation."
"The main question the investigation must address is how can this happen with
two ultramodern aircraft with collision-preventing equipment," he said.
The air force said the crash investigation could last several months.
The smaller plane, which carries up to 16 passengers, was making its
inaugural flight to the United States, where it had been purchased by an
American company, said its manufacturer, Embraer. It made an emergency landing,
but no one on board was hurt, said Jose Leonardo Mota, a spokesman for Brazil's
airport authority.
The general director for Brazil's Civil Aviation Agency Authority, Milton
Zuanazzi, said the Legacy plane belonged to a company named Excel Air, which had
been authorized to fly the aircraft out of Brazil on Saturday.
New York Times spokeswoman Diane McNulty said Times business travel columnist
Joe Sharkey was one of seven people aboard the Legacy jet, which was on route
from Sao Jose dos Campos, near Sao Paulo, to the United States. Sharkey was on
assignment in Brazil for a business magazine specializing on corporate jets.
Sharkey said the Legacy jet stabilized after the apparent collision until it
landed at a Brazilian air force base in the Amazon state of Para, according to
McNulty.
In a hotel lobby in Brasilia, some 50 somber and weary-eyed family members
and friends of those aboard the Gol waited for news of their loved ones. Some
complained that the airline was not releasing information.
"The worst thing of all not knowing how it happened and why it happened,"
said Carmelita Meira, the 70-year-old grandmother of one of the passengers.
In a warehouse owned by Gol, other relatives and friends also awaited news.
It was the first major accident for Gol Linhas Aereas Intelligentes SA, an
upstart Brazilian airline that started in 2001 with just six Boeing 737s in
2001, serving seven Brazilian cities. Gol said its jet had been delivered by
Boeing Co. just three weeks ago, and had been flown for only 200 hours.
Gol has grown exponentially since it began operations, rapidly gaining market
share by offering low-cost tickets, modeling its service after low-cost carriers
in the United States and Europe. Gol also benefited from the demise of Brazil's
flagship airline Varig, which was deeply in debt and virtually disintegrated
earlier this year.
The company is now Brazil's second-largest airline after Tam Linhas Aereas
SA, with more than 500 daily flights within Brazil and to Argentina, Bolivia,
Paraguay and Uruguay.