Death Toll Over 40 People, UAE Official Says
An Iranian plane
carrying mostly foreign workers renewing their visas crashed
Tuesday as it approached Sharjah airport in the United Arab
Emirates, killing 43 people aboard, officials said. Three survivors
were being treated at a hospital.
The Kish Air Fokker-50, flying to Sharjah from the Iranian
island of Kish in the Gulf, crashed at 11:40 a.m. in an open area
about two miles from the airport, said Ghanem al-Hajiry, director
general of civil aviation and the Sharjah Airport Authority. The
cause of the crash was not known, he said. No one on the ground was
hurt, Al-Hajiry said. Witnesses said the plane crashed on a road
near an upper-class residential neighborhood.
Kish Airline had a fleet of four medium-range, Russian-built
Tu-154M jets on domestic and international flights and four
short-range Fokker-50 turboprops, according to the company's Web
site.
Rescue workers in white robes searched for survivors in the
burning wreckage. Helicopters landed near the scene with rescue
workers and to remove victims. A row of bodies lay covered in red
blankets. Of the 46 people aboard, 43 were killed, said Col. Saleh
Ali al-Mutawaa, general director of Sharjah Police. He identified
them as 19 Iranians, 12 Indians, four Egyptians, two Filipinos, two
Algerians, one Syrian, one Chinese, one Nigerian and one
Bangladeshi.The front of the plane appeared to be no longer intact,
but there were no flames around the tail section.
Three crash victims were receiving treatment at al-Qasimi
hospital in Sharjah, an emergency room attendant at the hospital
confirmed to The Associated Press. Two of them were in critical
condition, he said. The attendant did not provide a condition on
the third, who was reported as stable by the Emirates' official
news agency, WAM. Al-Mutawaa said two of the victims at al-Qasimi
hospital were Filipinos, and the third was an Iranian. Two people
who survived the crash died after being taken to hospitals, WAM
reported.
Iran has a history of
air accidents, often blamed on badly maintained planes. In June, an
Iranian military C-130 transport plane crashed outside Tehran,
killing all seven people aboard. In February, a Russian-made
Ilyushin-76 crashed in southeastern Iran, killing all 275 aboard.
In Belarus in September, a Tu-154 belonging to Kish Air on a
Tehran-Minsk-Copenhagen flight went off course while making its
approach at the Minsk-2 airport, striking trees. None of the 40
people aboard was hurt. In 1995, an Iranian flight attendant
hijacked a Kish Air Boeing 707 to Israel during a flight from
Tehran. The plane was returned to Tehran with 174 passengers and
crew.
Last month, a top Iranian aviation official asked the United
States to lift sanctions on its airline industry as a humanitarian
gesture so the country can buy spare parts for its planes. Tehran
blames many of its crashes on the sanctions, saying they have
prevented the country from repairing and replacing an aging fleet
that includes many Russian-made planes. Iran has complained of
trouble buying European-made planes as well, because some parts and
engines are built in the United States.
In Tehran, Kish Airline officials refused to comment.