Rescuers are seen around the wreckage of an Algerian army plane which crashed near the Boufarik airbase killing 257 people, mostly army personnel and members of their families |
An AFP photographer at the scene saw the charred wreckage of the plane after it caught fire in a field near the Boufarik airbase, 30 kilometres (19 miles) south of Algiers.
Hundreds of ambulances and dozens of fire trucks with
sirens wailing rushed to the scene of the crash, in an uninhabited area
where one person was injured on the ground by debris.
Firefighters extinguished the blaze and security forces set up a cordon to prevent journalists and onlookers from approaching.
There
was no immediate word on the cause of the crash. Deputy Defence
Minister General Ahmed Gaid Salah visited the site and ordered an
investigation, the defence ministry said. Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika declared three days of national mourning over the crash starting Wednesday.
The
veteran leader also ordered that a special prayer be said for the
victims after weekly Muslim prayers on Friday, a decree published by
state press agency APS said.The Ilyushin IL-76 transport plane was bound for Tindouf in southwest Algeria near the borders with Morocco and Western Sahara.
The
Tindouf region is home to refugees from Western Sahara and houses the
administrative offices of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic declared
in 1976 by the Algiers-backed Polisario Front which seeks independence
for the region. Rabat considers Western Sahara an integral part of Morocco and proposes autonomy for the resource-rich territory.
The North African country has suffered a string of military and civilian aviation disasters but Wednesday's was Algeria's deadliest ever plane crash and the world's fourth costliest in human lives in 20 years.
- History of disasters -
Two Algerian military
planes collided mid-flight in December 2012 during a training exercise
in Tlemcen, in the far west of the country, killing the pilots of both
planes.
In February 2014, 77 people died when a military plane
carrying army personnel and family members crashed between Tamanrasset
in southern Algeria and the eastern city of Constantine.
The defence ministry blamed that crash on bad weather.
An Air Algerie passenger plane flying from Burkina Faso to
Algiers crashed in northern Mali in July 2014, killing all 116 people
on board including 54 French nationals.
In October the same year, a
military plane crashed in the south of the country during a training
exercise, killing the two men on board.
That came more than a
decade after all but one of the 103 people on an Air Algerie Boeing
737-200 died in March 2003 when it crashed on takeoff in the country's
south after an engine caught fire.
0 comments:
Post a Comment