Plane crash in Kyrgyz town kills dozens

Part of an engine is seen Monday in the debris from a cargo plane that crashed in a residential area outside Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
Part of an engine is seen Monday in the debris from a cargo plane that crashed in a residential area outside Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan -- A Turkish cargo plane crashed Monday in a residential area just outside the main airport in Kyrgyzstan, destroying half of a village and killing at least 37 people in the plane and on the ground, the Emergency Situations Ministry said.

The Boeing 747 crashed at 7:40 a.m. Kyrgyz time while approaching Manas airport, south of the capital, Bishkek, in the Central Asian nation.

An image on the website of the television station owned by Kyrgyzstan's government showed a large section of the nose of the aircraft, including the cockpit windows, on the ground after the plane apparently crashed through a building. Wreckage was scattered across a wide area.

A dozen body bags were laid out in the yard of one home. A car parked nearby was mangled in the crash, and a refrigerator lay open.

A video of the crash scene showed emergency workers in a snow-covered neighborhood, with pieces of the plane interspersed among houses and wreckage in flames. Tents were set up to help shelter displaced residents from temperatures of about 13 degrees Fahrenheit.

The bodies of 15 victims, including five children, all of them Kyrgyz citizens, had been identified by Monday evening, the Kyrgyz government said on its website.

Another 15 people, including six children, were hospitalized in the disaster, according to the health ministry.

Kyrgyz Emergency Situations Minister Kubatbek Boronov said 23 out of the 43 houses in the village had been destroyed. Several dozen homes were near the fence surrounding the runway.

The plane, which had departed from Hong Kong, belonged to the Istanbul-based cargo company ACT Airlines, which said the dead included the plane's four Turkish crew members: two pilots, a freight expert and a flight technician.

ACT Airlines is 49 percent owned by the Chinese conglomerate HNA Group, which has aviation, tourism and logistics units. ACT operates under the name MyCargo Airlines.

The cause of the crash was not immediately clear. Boronov told reporters that it was foggy at Manas when the plane came down but that weather conditions were not perilous.

One of the plane's two flight recorders was recovered at the scene, according to the Kyrgyz prime minister's office.

"I woke up because of a bright red light outside," resident Baktygul Kurbatova, who was slightly injured, told local television. "I couldn't understand what was happening. It turns out the ceiling and the walls were crashing on us. I was so scared, but I managed to cover my son's face with my hands so debris would not fall on him."

The Manas airport has been considerably expanded since the United States began to operate a military installation there, using it primarily for its military operations in Afghanistan. The U.S. handed the base over to the Kyrgyz military in 2014.

ACT Airlines said on Monday that the crash wasn't the result of "technical reasons or factors linked to the freight" on the plane, built in 2003. It did not specify the plane's cargo.

It said the plane's records book had no record of any technical faults and that the plane had not encountered any mishaps during its journey or as it proceeded to land at Bishkek.

Kyrgyz officials said they would create a government commission to investigate why the plane came down.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev on Monday to express his condolences and convey his sadness at the loss of lives in the disaster.

Turkey's transportation ministry also sent two experts from its accident investigation board to Bishkek to assist Kyrgyz authorities.

Information for this article was contributed by Leila Saralayeva and Suzan Fraser of The Associated Press; and by Michael Forsythe, Dan Bilefsky, Ivan Nechepurenko and Oleg Matsnev of The New York Times.

A Section on 01/17/2017

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