Dette er typisk russisk, akkurat som for 10 år siden da de skjøt ned Malaysian MH17. 298 mennesker ble drept. Da var det et ukrainsk jagerfly som skjøt flyet ned, noe som etttertrykkelig er stemplet som løgn.
Det er vanskelig å forstå at passasjerflyging har blitt gjennomført i dette området som er livsfarlig å fly over. Det er gambling med folks liv. (Red.)
Russia warns against 'hypotheses' after Azerbaijan
Airlines crash
38 minutes ago
Henri Astier
BBC News
Contains
upsetting scenes.
0:28
Contains upsetting scenes.
Emergency crews at scene of Kazakhstan plane crash
The Russian government has cautioned against promoting
"hypotheses" about the cause of the crash of a Russia-bound passenger
plane that killed 38 people in Kazakhstan on Wednesday.
Some aviation experts suggested that the Azerbaijan Airlines plane had
been hit by air defence systems over the Russian republic of Chechnya and state
media in Azerbaijan quote officials as saying a Russian missile was
responsible.
Before it went down near the Kazakh city of Aktau, the plane was
diverted across the Caspian Sea, from its destination in Chechnya to western
Kazakhstan.
Twenty nine of the 67
people on board survived. Azerbaijan held a national day of mourning on
Thursday for the victims of the crash.
Reuters
The Embraer 190 caught fire and split apart as it landed
"This is a great tragedy that has become a tremendous sorrow for
the Azerbaijani people," President Ilham Aliyev said on Thursday.
In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "It would be
wrong to put forward any hypotheses before the investigation's conclusions. We,
of course, will not do this, and no-one should do this. We need to wait until
the investigation is completed."
The Embraer 190 aircraft took off from the Azerbaijani capital Baku on
Wednesday morning. It was due to fly to Grozny in Chechnya but it was diverted
because of fog, the airline said.
A surviving passenger told Russian TV he believed the pilot had tried
twice to land in dense fog over Grozny before "the third time, something
exploded... some of the aircraft skin had blown out".
The plane was redirected to Aktau airport, some 450km (280 miles) to
the east. Footage shows the aircraft heading towards the ground at high speed
3km (1.9 miles) short of the runway, before bursting into flames as it lands.
Kazakh authorities have recovered the flight data recorder and an
investigation is under way. Shortly after the crash, reports from Russian
state-controlled TV said the most likely cause was a strike from a flock of
birds.
But that kind of collision typically results in the plane gliding
towards the nearest airfield, aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia told Reuters
news agency. "You can lose control of the plane, but you don't fly wildly
off course as a consequence," he said.
Justin Crump of risk advisory company Sibylline said the pattern of
damage inside and outside the plane indicated that Russian air defence active
in Grozny may have caused the crash.
"It looks very much like the detonation of an air defence missile
to the rear and to the left of the aircraft, if you look at the pattern of
shrapnel that we see," he told BBC Radio 4.
Late on Thursday Azerbaijan's state-run AnewZ channel said an
preliminary investigation had concluded that the plane had been hit by shrapnel
from a surface-to-air missile from Russia's Pantsir-S defence system.
When asked about the
reports, the chief prosecutor's office told the BBC that every version was
being investigated.
Chechnya has already been hit by Ukrainian drone strikes this month and
authorities in neighbouring Ingushetia said the Russian region had been
targeted for the first time since the war in Ukraine began.
A shopping centre was hit when a drone was shot down in nearby North
Ossetia, killing one woman, reports said.
Those on board were mostly Azerbaijani nationals, but there were also
some passengers from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.
Video footage showed survivors crawling out of the wreckage, some with
visible injuries.
The injured were taken to hospital. On Thursday, Azerbaijan's Azertac
news agency said seven were in a good enough condition to fly back to Baku.
Azerbaijan Airlines told reporters that the plane had been fully
serviced in October and had no technical malfunctions.
Embraer, a Brazilian
manufacturer and a smaller rival to Boeing and Airbus, has a strong safety
record.
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