Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

113 Killed As Armenian Airliner Crashes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 113 Killed As Armenian Airliner Crashes

    113 KILLED AS ARMENIAN AIRLINER CRASHES
    By Steve Gutterman

    AP
    Published: 03 May 2006

    An Armenian passenger plane carrying 113 people crashed early today
    off Russia's Black Sea coast as it was headed in for landing, killing
    everyone on board, emergency officials said.

    Armenian airline officials said they believed the crash was due to
    the stormy weather, but Sergei Kubinov, the head of the southern
    district office of Russia's Emergency Situations Ministry, said
    that the age of the aircraft and technical factors could have been
    involved. Investigators did not believe terrorism was a factor.

    The Airbus A-320, which belonged to the Armenian airline Armavia,
    disappeared from radar screens just under 4 miles from the shore
    and crashed after making a turn and heading toward the Adler airport
    near Sochi, Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman Viktor Beltsov
    said. Rescue officials in the ministry's southern regional branch said
    the 113 people aboard the plane, including six children, were killed.

    Wreckage from the plane was found not far from the shoreline, Beltsov
    said, and salvage workers said the fuselage was found at a depth of
    1,485 feet.

    Search and rescue teams have pulled 18 bodies from the water, Kubinov
    said; none were wearing life jackets, indicating they did not have
    sufficient warning to prepare for an emergency landing.

    Nineteen boats and divers were involved in the search, and a deep-sea
    robot was to be used to try to recover the plane's black box, he
    said. The water temperature was 12 degrees Celsius (53 F).

    The plane disappeared from radar screens at about 2.15am local time
    (2215 GMT Tuesday) during a flight from Yerevan to Sochi, a resort
    city on the Black Sea in southern Russia, Beltsov said.

    He said that the plane went down while trying to make a repeat attempt
    at an emergency landing. However, the Interfax news agency quoted
    the Russian air control agency as saying that the plane's crew had
    not declared any emergency.

    Armavia deputy commercial deputy Andrei Agadzhanov said in the Armenian
    capital, Yerevan, that the crew had communicated with Sochi ground
    controllers while the plane was flying over the Georgian capital,
    Tbilisi. The ground controllers said there were poor weather conditions
    but the plane could still land, the representative said. Just before
    the landing, however, the ground controllers told the crew to make
    another circle in the air before approaching the airport. Then the
    plane crashed.

    He said the crew was highly experienced, the airplane was in good
    condition and that weather conditions were "certainly" the cause.

    The Airbus A-320 was manufactured in 1995 and had been acquired on
    leasing by the airline. The aircraft underwent full-scale servicing
    a year ago.

    The plane broke up on impact with the water, and wreckage was thrown
    into a wide arc, Kubinov said.

    Rough seas, driving rain and low visibility were hampering the search,
    Russian news agencies reported.

    There was no indication yet of the nationalities of the passengers
    and crew.

    Agadzhanov said that the airline's deputy general director, Vyacheslav
    Yaralov, had been aboard.

    Relatives of those aboard the plane were gathering at the Yerevan
    airport for a charter flight to Sochi.
Working...
X