A Russian A-310 airliner crashed at a Siberian airport early
Sunday, killing at least 122 people and injuring more than 50
others, Russian news agencies reported.
The A-310 jet of the Russian airline Sibir from Moscow's
Domodedovo airport slid off the runway and hit a building during
landing at the Irkutsk airport at 3:00 AM (23:00 GMT Saturday).
After its collision with the building, the jet burst into
flames. It took firefighters more than two hours to put down the
fire.
According to latest data from the Emergency Ministry, 204 people
were aboard the crashed plane, including 193 passengers, eight crew
members and three people whose names had not been included in the
passenger list.
The ministry confirmed that 122 people died, 58 were
hospitalized, 12 still unaccounted for, and 12 have returned
home.
The Sibir Airlines said 12 foreign citizens were among the
passengers, including three from Germany, three from China, two
from Poland, two from Azerbaijan and two from Belarus.
Seven of the foreign passengers survived and were sent to a
local hospital, including two Germans, two Poles, two Belarussians
and one Azerbaijani, the Itar-Tass news agency said.
Russian television showed footage of the jet wreckage in between
several lockup garages. Only the airplane's tail section with the
white-on -blue logo of Sibir airlines was still intact.
The black boxes of the airliner have been retrieved and handed
over to the Irkutsk Regional Prosecutor's Office, the regional
administration's press service announced.
The wreckage is being cleared from the crash site. The
survivors, who escaped from the plane on their own and went home,
are returning to the airport to give accounts of what happened.
Technical malfunctions and a human error were among likely
causes of the crash, the Prosecutor General's Office said.
"But it would be premature to prioritize any of the theories
viewed. A more definite answer could be given after the flight
recorders have been read," spokesperson for the Prosecutor
General's Office Marina Gridneva was quoted by the Interfax news
agency as saying.
According to a spokesman for Sibir Airlines, "neither the air
controllers, nor mission control reported any emergencies when the
plane was landing."
Before flying from Moscow to Irkutsk, Transport Minister Igor
Levitin said the plane's pilots contacted air traffic controllers
during the landing and said they had landed successfully, but radio
contact suddenly broke off.
It was the fourth air crash in Irkutsk in the past 12 years.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared July 10 a Day of
Mourning for the victims of the Irkutsk air crash, the Kremlin
press service said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 10, 2006)