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Australian Siblings In Iranian Air Disaster

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  • Australian Siblings In Iranian Air Disaster

    AUSTRALIAN SIBLINGS IN IRANIAN AIR DISASTER

    Brisbane Times
    http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/world/australian- siblings-in-iranian-air-disaster-20090715-dlkj.htm l
    July 16 2009
    Australia

    Two Australians are believed to have been among 168 people killed
    after a plane crash in north-west Iran.

    The Department of Foreign Affairs today confirmed that two Australians
    - a NSW brother and sister aged in their 20s - were listed on the
    flight manifesto for the Caspian Airlines Tupolev TU-154 that crashed
    near the city of Qazvin.

    The siblings hold dual citizenship with Australia and Iran, a DFAT
    spokeswoman said.

    A statement from DFAT said the siblings' remains had not yet been
    identified.

    "Consular staff from the Australian embassy in Tehran, Iran,
    are seeking urgent information from local authorities about the
    arrangements to identify the Australians and assistance to return
    their remains," the statement said.

    "The plane is completely destroyed and bodies are burned and ruined,"
    the state-run Mehr newsagency cited a provincial police chief, Masoud
    Jafarinasab, as saying.

    The aircraft went down 16 minutes after taking off from the Imam
    Khomeini International Airport in Tehran, a spokesman for Iran's
    aviation agency, Reza Jafarzadeh, told Mehr. He said flight 7908 was
    headed for the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

    The plane was carrying 153 passengers and 15 crew, he told state TV
    in a phone interview.

    Most of the passengers were Armenians, but some Georgian citizens
    and other foreigners were on board, the Associated Press reported,
    citing an unidentified representative of the plane's operator,
    Caspian Airlines.

    Debris was scattered across an area stretching up to 15 kilometres,
    suggesting the aircraft disintegrated in the air, Mehr reported,
    without citing anyone.

    The plane appears to have come down about halfway into its climb,
    said David Learmount, a former British Royal Air Force pilot and
    air-safety editor at Flight International magazine.

    The nature of the impact suggests a loss of control rather than a
    crash landing, he said.

    Even if two of the three engines fail, a TU-154 pilot can attempt to
    land in a controlled way. The model has a safety record comparable
    to Boeings of the same generation, such as the 727, Mr Learmount said.

    "Its safety record is good but not quite comparable with that of a
    modern Airbus or Boeing. The pilot's situational awareness is not up
    to what a modern cockpit can give you."

    Caspian Airlines refused to comment on what may have caused the plane
    to crash before examining its flight data recorders, the Russian
    newsagency Interfax said.

    It is too early to say whether the model's age or characteristics
    played any part in the disaster, Mr Learmount stressed.
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