Culled from CNNInternational
A commercial airplane carrying at least 121 people crashed Friday in Rawalpindi just before it was to land at an airport in Islamabad, according to Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority, which cited poor weather as a possible factor. No survivors have been found, officials said.
The Bhoja Air Boeing
737-200 was making its first evening flight from Karachi to Islamabad,
where the weather was cloudy, officials said. Authorities initially
reported that 131 people were on board, but authority spokesman Pervaz
George later reduced that number.
The crash occurred near
the Pakistani air force's Chaklala airbase, which is adjacent to the
Benazir Bhutto International Airport in Islamabad.
Debris and body parts
were scattered across the crash site as workers sifted through the
wreckage in the heavily populated residential area. At least 110 bodies
had been recovered from the scene, a government official said.
The flight data recorder
was recovered Friday at the site of the crash, according to CNN
affiliate Geo TV, which broadcast video of the device after it was
found.
The Bhoja airliner was
flying from the southern seaport city of Karachi and crashed just before
touching down after its 3½-hour flight.
Local authorities say the crash site is located about five aeronautical miles from the airport in Islamabad.
Weather reports indicated
that conditions in the area included thunderstorms and limited
visibility, according to CNN meteorologist Mari Ramos.
Authorities are
investigating what may have caused the crash and the potential for
additional casualties at the site of the wreckage. Rawalpindi is
considered one of Pakistan's most populous cities.
Four villages were
affected by the crash and debris from the plane has been recovered
within a kilometer of the site, Interior Minister A Rehman Malik said in
a interview with Pakistani media.
Investigators are "going
to be looking at technology," aviation security consultant Greg Feith
said. "What kind of radio equipment, what kind of ground proximity
warning system the aircraft was equipped with, weather radar, things
like that ... since the weather may be a factor in this accident."
Pakistani Prime Minister
Yusuf Raza Gilani on Friday expressed "deep shock and grief over the
tragedy," ordering his country's Civil Aviation Authority "to gear up
all its resources for rescue operation," state media reported.
A separate inquiry into
the incident has been launched by Pakistan's Safety Investigation Board,
and two crisis operation rooms have been set up at airports in both
Islamabad and Karachi to provide information to the affected families.
A Boeing spokeswoman,
meanwhile, said the American manufacturer "stands ready to provide
technical assistance to the Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan."
"The Boeing Company
wishes to extend its profound condolences to the families and friends of
those lost today in the Bhoja Air accident in Pakistan, as well as
wishes for the recovery of those injured," said Julie O'Donnell.
Responding to
allegations that the airliner was not in good condition to fly, Defence
Secretary Nargis Sethi told a local television station that the
government has initiated "an immediate investigation."
"Whether it was 10, 8 years old, or not airworthy is something that we can't confirm yet," Sethi said.
But Bhoja Air station
manager Zahid Bangish told a Pakistani television station later Friday
that the "aircraft was new, not the old one and unairworthy."
The crash is reminiscent
of one in 2010,when 152 people were killed as a Pakistani passenger
plane crashed on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan's capital. That
plane was also was coming from Karachi when it crashed into a hillside
while trying to land, officials said at the time.
Four years earlier, another airliner crashed in central Pakistan, leaving 45 dead.
The first known
commercial passenger airplane crash occurred in Pakistan in 1953 when a
Canadian Pacific DH-106 Comet crashed shortly after takeoff from
Karachi. That crash killed 11 people on board.
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