This Article is From Jan 17, 2017

At Least 37 Dead As Cargo Plane Crashes Into Homes In Kyrgyzstan

At Least 37 Dead As Cargo Plane Crashes Into Homes In Kyrgyzstan

The plane was supposed to make a stopover at Manas international airport

Bishkek: A Turkish cargo jet crashed near Kyrgyzstan's Manas airport on Monday, killing at least 37 people, most of them residents of a village struck by the Boeing 747 as it tried to land in dense fog, Kyrgyz officials said. The majority of the dead were from the village of Dacha-Suu where the plane -- an ACT Airlines flight from Hong Kong to Istanbul via Kyrgyzstan's capital Bishkek -- crashed at around 7.30 am local time (0130 GMT), a spokesman for the country's emergency services ministry was quoted by news agency AFP.

According to the airport administration, the plane was supposed to make a stopover at Manas, near the capital city Bishkek, on its way from Hong Kong to Istanbul. It crashed when trying to land in poor visibility at 7:31 local time (0131 GMT).

News agency Reuters cited Kyrgyzstan's transport ministry saying there were five people on board. It identified the plane as a Turkish Airlines Boeing 747-400, but the company said it belonged to another Turkish firm, ACT Airlines.

ACT airlines confirmed the jet belonged to their company.

The doomed plane ploughed for a few hundred metres (yards) through the village, shattering into pieces and damaging some 15 buildings.
 
kyrgyzstan plane crash reuters

A policeman guards an area at the plane crash site near Kyrgyzstan's Manas airport outside Bishkek


Initial estimates put the death toll from the crash at 37, said Kyrgyzstan's emergencies ministry.

"Our condolences to the families of those who have lost their lives in the tragic incident involving an ACT Airlines aircraft in Kyrgyzstan," Turkish Airlines said on its Twitter account.

The doomed plane damaged 15 buildings in the village, said Mukhammed Svarov, head of crisis management centre at the emergencies ministry.

Rescue workers have recovered the body of a pilot and 15 villagers, the healthcare ministry said.

(With inputs from AFP and Reuters)
.