No survivors after Pakistani passenger jet crashes with 127 on board

Aircraft crashes into wheat field near Islamabad, goes up in flames after trying to land in thunderstorm; airline owner restricted from leaving Pakistan

Pakistani rescue workers amid wreckage of the Boeing 737 passenger plane which crashed in the outskirts of Islamabad. (photo credit: AP)
Pakistani rescue workers amid wreckage of the Boeing 737 passenger plane which crashed in the outskirts of Islamabad. (photo credit: AP)

A Pakistani passenger jet with 127 people on board crashed into wheat fields Friday as it was trying to land in a thunderstorm at an airport near the capital Islamabad. Sobbing relatives of those on the flight flocked to the airport.

No survivors have been found, officials reported Saturday. The owner of the airline, Farooq Bhoja, is prohibited from leaving the country while aviation officials investigate the crash, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said.

Emergency workers used flashlights to search among the smoldering wreckage of the fuselage, smashed seats and body parts for any sign of life at the crash site, which was just a few kilometers no sinfrom the Benazir Bhutto International Airport. One rescue official asked villagers to bring him sheets to cover the dead.

The aircraft was a Boeing 737-200 operated by Bhoja Air, a domestic carrier that has just four planes and only resumed operations last month after suspending them in 2001 due to financial difficulties. The flight was traveling from the country’s largest city of Karachi to the Pakistani capital, officials said. It was the airline’s first evening flight from Karachi, according to a Bhoja Air official.

Relatives of those on the flight thronged the airline’s counters at Karachi and Islamabad airports, crying.

“My brother’s wife was on board this flight,” said Naveed Khan, who was among family members who gathered at Karachi’s airport. “We pray for the departed souls, what else can we do now?”

Wreckage, including smashed seats, clothes and jewelry belonging to passengers, was spread out over a one-kilometer wide area.

“I saw nothing but body parts and twisted metal on the ground when reached the scene,” said local resident Mustafa, who only gave one

Pakistani rescue workers amid of a wreckage of the Boeing 737 passenger plane which crashed in the outskirts of Islamabad. (photo credit: AP)
Pakistani rescue workers amid wreckage of the Boeing 737 passenger plane which crashed in the outskirts of Islamabad. (photo credit: AP)

name. “We collected up small pieces of human flesh and bundled them in cloth sheets like we collect grain.”

Islamabad police chief Bani Yameen said that nobody on the ground appeared to be killed, “but apparently all onboard perished.” Civil aviation officials also reported survivors were unlikely, said Defense Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar.

A violent rain, wind and thunder storm was lashing the capital at the time of the crash, which occurred about 6:40 p.m. local time.

“It was really bad weather for a flight,” said Navy captain Arshad Mahmood, who lives near the crash site. “The pilot was forced to move down to avoid clouds that were generating the lightening and thunder.”

Several farmers threshing wheat in the field near the crash said they saw the craft burst into flames when it hit the ground.

“The flames leapt up like they were touching the sky,” said Mohammad Zubair.

The army declared an emergency and cordoned off the crash site.

TV footage showed wreckage of the plane, including parts of what looked like its engine and wing, up against the wall of a small building. Rescue officials were working in the dark, with many using flashlights as they combed the area.

The last major plane crash in the country — and Pakistan’s worst ever — occurred in July 2010 when an Airbus A321 aircraft operated by Airblue crashed in the hills overlooking Islamabad, killing all 152 people on board.

A government investigation blamed the pilot for veering off course amid stormy weather. The impact of the crash was devastating, scorching a wide swath of the hillside and scattering wreckage over a kilometer  stretch. Most bodies were so badly damaged that identification required DNA testing.

Bhoja Air started domestic operations in Pakistan in 1993 and eventually expanded to international flights to the United Arab Emirates in 1998. The company suspended operations in 2001 due to financial difficulties but resumed them in 2012.

In a statement, the Boeing Co. extended its condolences to the families of the victims and offered technical assistance to Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority.

 

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