Algerian plane with 120 passengers disappear mysteriously

Published on : Friday, July 25, 2014

download32In another aviation mishap an Air Algerie plane with around 120 people on board including French and Spanish nationals vanished from the sky on Thursday (July 24) during a flight from Burkina Faso to Algiers, according to company sources and officials.

 

Aviation sources said the aircraft was a McDonnell Douglas MD-83 leased from Spanish company Swiftair and carrying passengers of different nationalities.

The six-member crew on board were Spanish, said Spain’s airline pilots’ union Sepla, while Swiftair confirmed the aircraft had gone missing less than an hour after takeoff from Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.

 

Many French nationals were suspected to be on board the plane, France’s Transport Minister Frederic Cuvillier said in Paris.

 

He said top civil aviation officials were holding an emergency meeting and a crisis cell had been set up.

Earlier reports had said the plane was a DC-9. “The plane disappeared at Gao (in Mali), 500 kilometres (300 miles) from the Algerian border.

 

Several nationalities are among the victims,” Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal was cited as saying by Algerian radio.

 

The Air Algerie source earlier said contact was lost while the airliner was still in Malian airspace and approaching the border with Algeria.

“The plane was not far from the Algerian frontier when the crew was asked to make a detour because of poor visibility and to prevent the risk of collision with another aircraft on the Algiers-Bamako route,” the airline source said.
“Contact was lost after the change of course.” The carrier, in a statement carried by national news agency APS, said it initiated an “emergency plan” in the search for flight AH5017, which flies the four-hour passenger route four times a week.

 

One of Algeria’s worst air disasters occurred in February this year, when a C-130 military aircraft carrying 78 people crashed in poor weather in the mountainous northeast, killing more than 70 people.

 

The plane was flying from the desert garrison town of Tamanrasset in Algeria’s deep south to Constantine, 320 kilometres east of Algiers.

Despite international military intervention still under way, the situation remains unstable in northern Mali, which was seized by jihadist groups for several months in 2012.

 

On July 17, the Bamako government and armed groups from northern Mali launched tough talks in Algiers aimed at securing an elusive peace deal, and with parts of the country still mired in conflict.

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