Sudan cargo plane crashes north of Dubai
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – A Sudanese cargo plane crashed shortly after takeoff Wednesday afternoon from Sharjah airport near Dubai, killing at least six crew members.
The Boeing 707 operated by Sudan Airways went down in unpopulated desert about two miles (three kilometers) north of the airport, said Sheik Khalid al-Qassimi, director of the Sharjah department of civil aviation. He said there were no survivors among the six crew members aboard.
Sudan's official SUNA news agency quoted an unnamed official from the airline saying seven crew members were killed. The discrepancy in the toll could not immediately be reconciled.
As night fell, the cause of the crash remained unclear. The "black box" flight recorders that should contain information about the flights have been recovered, al-Qassimi said.
Witnesses described seeing the plane swing sharply to the right shortly after takeoff as it struggled to gain altitude.
"We saw it taking off at quite a low level. The nose was quite high. Higher than normal," said Bill Buchanan, a Dubai resident who was playing golf nearby. "It veered to the right, then nosed down straight into the desert. There was a huge ball of fire and smoke."
The wreckage was spread over a wide area near the Sharjah Golf & Shooting Club. Little of the plane remained intact.
A tower of black smoke poured hundreds of feet into the air immediately after the crash, said Martin Duff, who was in his office at the golf academy when he heard a loud jet pass by overhead.
"A couple of seconds later there was a big bang, and the whole ground shuddered," he said. He rushed to the scene, about 50 yards (meters) away. "By the time I got there, it was nothing but burnt black wreckage."
Local TV station Sharjah Television showed firemen later hosing down smoldering pieces of debris at the crash site. Plumes of gray smoke rose high into the air.
A large chunk of the plane's wing was seen amid smaller metal pieces. Rescue workers with facemasks carried away stretchers covered with white sheets.
At sundown, crash investigators were working under flood lights as pieces of debris continued to smolder.
Officials said the flight was operated by Sudan Airways and was bound for the Sudanese capital, Khartoum.
The plane itself, however, was owned by a private Sudan-based company, Azza Transport, according to SUNA and a spokesman for the Sudan Civil Aviation Authority, Abdel Hafez Abdel Rahim.
Efforts to reach Sudan Airways and Azza were unsuccessful.
Currently have 0 comments: