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80 killed in
Iranian plane fire
TEHRAN--An Iranian passenger plane caught fire after its tire burst on
landing at an airport in Iran's northeastern city of Mashhad on Friday,
killing at least 80 people, state television and officials said.
State television said 147 people were on board the flight to Mashhad,
home to Iran's holiest shrine, from the southern port city of Bandar
Abbas. It said the death toll was at least 80, all of them passengers.
Iranian media said the crew survived.
A civil aviation official, Reza Jafarzadeh, told Reuters 148 people were
on the state-owned Iranairtour plane, flight number 945, but he did not
give a death toll. He said investigation teams were at the scene.
"Because some of the injured have been transferred to hospitals, we have
no exact figures about the death toll," the managing director of
Iranairtour, Mehdi Sadeqi, told state television.
Television pictures showed a broken-up plane lying on the side of the
runway with parts of its fuselage charred. The cockpit appeared to be
largely unaffected by the fire, as did much of the rear portion of the
plane.
Firefighters were shown extinguishing fires in parts of the smoldering
wreck and clambering over other areas of the fuselage, carrying out
corpses covered in blankets.
The plane, a Russian-built Tupolev 154, caught fire at 1.45 p.m. (1015
GMT) after slipping off the side of the runway when a tire burst on
landing, state media reported.
"The flight crew and the pilot of this flight survived, and this will be
a great help to find out the cause of the accident as soon as possible,"
Roads and Transport Minister Mohammad Rahmati told Iran's students news
agency ISNA.
An Iranairtour official, who asked not to be identified, said the
airline was contacting families of the victims. He also said flights to
Mashhad had been canceled after the crash.
Pilgrims flock to Mashhad throughout the year to visit the tomb of Imam
Reza, the eighth Muslim Shi'ite imam. It was not clear if any of those
on board the Iranairtour flight were making the pilgrimage.
Bandar Abbas, where the plane began its journey, is the Islamic
Republic's main port. Nearby the port is the popular Iranian holiday
destination of Qeshm island.
Air safety experts say Iran has a poor safety record with a string of
crashes in recent decades, many involving Russian-made aircraft.
U.S. sanctions on the Islamic state have prevented it from buying new
aircraft or spares from the West, forcing it to supplement its aging
fleet of Boeing and Airbus planes with aircraft from the former Soviet
Union.
The last major plane disaster in Iran involved a military plane which
crashed in January, killing at least 11 people. Another military plane
hit a tower block in Tehran in December, killing 94 people on board and
at least 22 people on the ground.
The most recent Iranian civil aviation disaster involved a Kish airlines
Fokker-50 plane, which crashed in February 2004 during landing in
Sharjah airport in the United Arab Emirates killing 43 of the 45
passengers and crew aboard.—Agencies |