Nepal:
Rescuers recover 14 bodies from plane wreck
By Zubaidah Abdul Jalil
BBC News
Published
28 minutes ago
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
The wreckage of a Twin Otter aircraft, operated by Nepali carrier Tara Air, was strewn on a mountainside in Mustang a day after it crashed
Rescuers in Nepal have so
far recovered 14 bodies from the crash site of a small plane carrying 22
people, an airport official said on Monday.
The wreckage of the plane,
operated by Nepali carrier Tara Air, was recovered in Mustang district in
northern Nepal.
The passenger plane was on
a 20-minute flight when it lost contact with air traffic control five minutes
before it was due to land.
The search is ongoing for
the remaining passengers, an official said.
"Fourteen bodies have
been recovered so far, search continues for the remaining," the country's
Civil Aviation Authority spokesman Deo Chandra Lal Karn told AFP a day after
the crash. "The weather is very bad but we were able to take a team to the
crash site."
Four Indians, two Germans
and 16 Nepalis were on board the plane, according to reports. But search
operations were hampered by bad weather and mountainous terrain, and only
resumed on Monday morning.
Images posted on Twitter
by a spokesman from the Nepalese Army showed the remains of the plane -
prominently bearing its registered call sign 9N-AET.
"Search and rescue
troops have physically located the plane crash site," Narayan Silwal said
on Twitter earlier on Monday, marking the end of a nearly 24-hour long search
for the wreckage.
The plane had departed the
tourist town of Pokhara at around 0955 local time on Sunday (04:10 GMT). It was
bound for Jomsom - a popular tourist and pilgrimage site.
Nepal has had a fraught
record of aviation accidents, often due to its sudden weather changes and
airstrips located in rocky terrains that are difficult to access.
In early 2018, a US-Bangla
flight carrying 71 people from Dhaka in Bangladesh caught fire as it landed in
Kathmandu, killing 51 people.
More recently, three
people died in a plane crash in April 2019 when the aircraft veered off the
runway and hit a stationary helicopter at Lukla Airport - considered one of the
most tricky runways to navigate.
Status: | Information is only available from news or social media reports |
Date: | Sunday 29 May 2022 |
Time: | ca 10:10 |
Type: | de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter 300 |
Operator: | Tara Air |
Registration: | 9N-AET |
MSN: | 619 |
First flight: | 1979-04-21 (43 years 2 months) |
Engines: | 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-27 |
Crew: | Fatalities: 3 / Occupants: 3 |
Passengers: | Fatalities: 19 / Occupants: 19 |
Total: | Fatalities: 22 / Occupants: 22 |
Aircraft damage: | Destroyed |
Aircraft fate: | Written off (damaged beyond repair) |
Location: | Sanosware ( Nepal) |
Crash site elevation: | 4420 m (14501 feet) amsl |
Phase: | En route (ENR) |
Nature: | Domestic Scheduled Passenger |
Departure airport: | Pokhara Airport (PKR/VNPK), Nepal |
Jomsom Airport (JMO/VNJS), Nepal |
A DHC-6 Twin Otter 300 operated by Tara Air impacted a mountainside at 14500 feet while on a domestic flight from Pokhara to Jomsom, Nepal.
The flight took off from runway 04 at Pokhara Airport at 09:55 local time (04:10 UTC).
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