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Kin On Hand To ID Russian Crash Victims

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  • Kin On Hand To ID Russian Crash Victims

    KIN ON HAND TO ID RUSSIAN CRASH VICTIMS
    By Mike Eckel

    phillyBurbs.com, PA
    May 4 2006

    SOCHI, Russia - Searchers combed the waters off a Russian resort city
    Thursday, looking for bodies and a flight recorder from an Armenian
    passenger jet that slammed into the Black Sea in bad weather and
    disintegrated, killing all 113 people on board.

    Anguished relatives and friends gathered at a central hotel and a
    city morgue, where many stared ashen-faced at grotesquely disfigured
    faces and bodies appearing in coroners' photographs.

    The photos were posted on a nearly 6-foot-high wooden board in the
    courtyard. Forensic authorities emerged from the building periodically
    asking if anyone had recognized a person in the photographs.

    Fifty-three bodies had been recovered so far, of which just 28 were
    identified, Transport Minister Igor Levitin said. The plane was
    traveling to Sochi from the Armenian capital, Yerevan, and most of
    the passengers were Armenian.

    President Vladimir Putin told chief prosecutor Vladimir Ustinov in
    televised comments to work fast to determine the cause of the crash,
    but acknowledged it would be difficult without flight recorders.

    Levitin told reporters that searchers had located a large part of
    the plane's fuselage that was emitting a radio signal believed to
    be from a flight recorder, and Russian news agencies later quoted
    an emergency official as saying signals from a second "black box"
    were detected nearby.

    But Levitin said the debris lay in some 2,230 feet of water, and that
    Russian authorities did not have the equipment to raise the wreckage.

    "We will turn to other countries that have the experience in raising
    objects from the depths," he said.

    The Airbus A-320 plunged into the sea in the pre-dawn hours Wednesday
    in heavy rain and poor visibility as it approached the airport in
    Adler, about 12 miles south of Sochi, a city wedged between the sea
    and soaring, snowcapped mountains. Searchers found wreckage spread
    over a wide area about 3 1/2 miles offshore.

    Federal prosecutors dismissed the possibility of terrorism, and
    other officials pointed to the rough weather or pilot error as the
    likely cause.

    The head of the Georgian air control agency, which covered 90 percent
    of the Armavia jet's final flight, said the crew had begun to return
    to Yerevan because of weather conditions around Sochi. But when it
    was over the western Georgian city of Kutaisi, Russian air controllers
    announced that the weather at the Adler airport had improved.

    "And since they had enough fuel, the pilot decided to fly back
    to Adler," Georgian agency chief Georgy Karbelashvili told The
    Associated Press.

    The Interfax news agency, citing an unidentified official in
    the Russian commission investigating the disaster, said there was
    information indicating the crew was informed just three to four miles
    from the runway, when the plane was at an altitude of about 1,000 feet,
    that landing was "not recommended." The official said the plane was
    turning back when it hit the water.

    The president of the Armenian Aviation Association, former pilot Dmitry
    Adbashian, said in Yerevan that Sochi's airport is difficult because
    of limited approaches and fickle weather, and that rules established
    in the Soviet era prohibited inexperienced pilots from landing there.

    He told the AP it is impossible for a plane that is less than 2
    1/2 miles out and lower than 650 feet to pull back and start a new
    approach.
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