Friday, October 05, 2007

Toll rises in DR Congo air crash

A cargo aeroplane has crashed in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, killing at least 38 people and injuring up to 30.


The Antonov AN-26, belonging to Congolese airline Africa One, crashed on Thursday morning in the densely populated Kingasani neighbourhood of Kinshasa, near Ndili airport.

The ministry of humanitarian affairs said 23 people were on board. They were all killed, as were at least 15 people on the ground.

The aeroplane, which crashed shortly after take-off, had a Russian crew, according to Russia's ITAR-Tass news agency.

Major Gabriel De Brosses, a spokesman for the UN mission in Congo (Monuc), said the mission had sent a rescue team and firefighters to the crash site, which is 5km from the airport.

Joe Bavier, a local journalist, told Al Jazeera that the aircraft crashed into a densely populated slum, and that there were reports that houses had been struck by the aeroplane.

An airport security official who visited the crash site told Reuters that fire crews had experienced difficulty in reaching the burning wreckage.

"There are at least four houses burning, the airplane is burning... There's a lot of smoke and flames, everybody in the houses must be dead," he said.

Papy Kangufu, a resident, told the Associated Press that dense smoke at the crash site was making it difficult to assess the scale of death and injury.

Cargo aeroplanes in Congo are often flown by pilots from former Soviet states, but the aircraft are often poorly maintained and overloaded.

DR Congo's air safety record is one of the world's worst and was called an "embarrassment" by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) last year.

Africa One airlines is on the European Union's list of banned airlines.

All but one of the airlines certified by the DR Congo authorities are banned from the EU.

In 1996, 300 people were killed when an Antonov AN-32 crashed after take-off from Kinshasa's main airport and plowed into a crowded open-air market.

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

Link and photo on Antonov 26 by http://watanzaniaoslo.blogspot.com



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