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  • Cyprus plane crash victims "frozen solid"

    Cyprus plane crash victims "frozen solid"
    By Brian Williams and Karolos Grohmann | August 15, 2005

    Reuters, UK
    Aug 15 2005

    ATHENS (Reuters) - Most of the bodies recovered from a Cypriot plane
    that crashed near Athens with 121 people on board were frozen solid,
    a Greek official said, suggesting the airliner was a flying tomb
    before it plunged to earth.

    As accident investigators combed the crash site for clues, aviation
    experts were baffled at what appeared to have been a catastrophic
    failure of cabin pressure or oxygen supply in freezing temperatures
    at 35,000 feet -- nearly 10 km (6 miles) up, higher than Mount Everest.

    One expert said reports of extreme cold suggested there was no air
    circulating in the cabin.

    "Autopsy on passengers so far shows the bodies were frozen solid,
    including some whose skin was charred by flames from the crash,"
    the Defense Ministry source, with access to the investigation, told
    Reuters on Monday.

    The Helios Airways Boeing 737 was carrying 115 passengers and six
    crew when it crashed 40 km (25 miles) north of Athens on Sunday.
    There were no survivors.

    Rescue workers recovered the body of the pilot, a German identified
    as Martin Hans Gurgen, and said they had found the plane's black box
    flight recorders, including the one that records pilot conversations,
    and would send them to France for analysis.

    The recovery of the black boxes is crucial to determining the cause
    of the worst air disaster in Greece and the worst involving a Cypriot
    airline.

    Greek TV reported on Sunday that the pilot had told air traffic
    controllers the plane was experiencing problems with its air
    conditioning system shortly before contact was lost.

    A passenger list released by Cyprus' Transport Ministry showed a family
    of four Armenians living in Cyprus, 12 Greeks and 104 Cypriots were
    killed in the crash. There were 17 children under the age of 16 on
    board, the youngest aged 4.

    Relatives of some victims were on their way from Cyprus to the crash
    site to start the grim task of trying to identify loved ones.

    At Larnaca airport in Cyprus, from where the doomed plane took off,
    crew and passengers on Monday refused to board an aircraft belonging
    to Helios Airways, the state-run Cyprus News Agency reported.

    About 100 passengers due to fly from Larnaca to Sofia demanded to
    travel on planes of other airlines. "First the crew refused to board,
    then the passengers," the agency said.

    But a Helios spokeswoman denied a Cyprus Transport Ministry statement
    that its planes had been grounded.

    The Mediterranean island of Cyprus started three days of mourning with
    flags at half mast in a long weekend holiday that is the busiest of
    the summer for Greeks and Cypriots.

    TERRORISM RULED OUT

    The plane was on a flight from Larnaca to Prague with a stop in
    Athens. Greek authorities ruled out any hijacking or terrorism links
    to the crash.

    The flight was declared "renegade" when it entered Greek air space and
    failed to make radio contact. Two F-16 air force jets were scrambled
    to investigate and reported that the co-pilot was slumped in the
    cockpit and the pilot was not visible.

    Defense Ministry officials said 90 minutes elapsed between the alert
    being raised and the plane crashing at 12:03 p.m.

    Greek government spokesman Theodore Roussopoulos said the F-16 pilots
    reported that with the pilots out of action there may have been a
    last-gasp effort by others on the plane to bring it back under control.

    "The F-16s saw two individuals in the cockpit seemingly trying to
    regain control of the airplane," Roussoupoulos said. It was not known
    if they were passengers or other crew.

    "The F-16s also saw oxygen masks down when they got close to the
    aircraft. The aircraft was making continuous right-hand turns to show
    it had lost radio contact."

    A passenger on the doomed plane said in an SMS text to his cousin in
    Athens: "The pilot has turned blue. Cousin farewell, we're freezing."

    Kieran Daly, editor of Air Transport Intelligence, told Reuters:
    "When he talks about being extremely cold, that really suggests that
    there was possibly no air circulating in the cabin at all."

    Other questions included how the plane appeared to fly for so long
    with the pilots unconscious or dead. Media speculated it was on auto
    pilot and crashed when it ran out of fuel after being in the air for
    twice the scheduled flight time.

    The Defense Ministry said it suspected the plane's oxygen supply or
    pressurization system may have malfunctioned, which could have led
    to death within seconds for all on board.

    Loss of cabin pressure was identified as the probable cause of other
    similar but smaller-scale air crashes in recent years.

    Golfer Payne Stewart and five others were killed when their Learjet
    aircraft crashed in the United States in 1999 after flying for more
    than four hours without radio contact.
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