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Syrian plane
crash kills 3
DAMASCUS (Syria)—A small plane crashed in an empty field south of
Damascus on Sunday, killing the three-member crew on board, Syria’s
state-run news agency and witnesses said.
Syria’s official news agency SANA said the plane, a Navajo, belonged to
the state-run Public Institution for Topography and had been on a
training flight when it crashed because of technical failure. It said
the plane’s three crew members were killed.
Earlier Sunday, the witnesses said the small plane appeared to be a
military aircraft on a training exercise when it crashed in an empty
field in Moaddamiyeh, a mostly residential district nine miles south of
the Syrian capital. The witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the subject. The discrepancy between the
two reports could not immediately be explained. SANA said a committee to
investigate the crash had been formed.
Syria has been jittery since a Sept. 6 Israeli air raid northeast of the
country near the Turkish border. Syrian President Bashar Assad said late
last week that the raid struck an unused military building. Israel has
not said what the target was. The incident — fueled by the official
silence from both Syria and Israel — has sparked furious and conflicting
reports in the foreign press, claiming that Israel attacked an arms
shipment to Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon or a nuclear installation
built with North Korean help, or that the mission was an attempt to
gauge Syria’s air defenses.—Agencies
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