Dozens Killed In Sudan Plane Crash
Jetliner With More Than 200 Aboard Lands In Thunderstorm, Veers Off Runway And Catches Fire
-
Play CBS Video Video Fiery Plane Crash In Sudan A Sudan Airways plane crashed on the tarmac of a Sudanese airport after it became engulfed in flames. Mark Phillips reports.
-
Video Plane Crashes In Sudan "CBS News RAW": A plane carrying about 200 passengers veered off the runway and burst into flames in Sudan, after arriving from Amman, Jordan. Number of casualities was not immediately known.
-
-
Rescuers attend the scene where a Sudanese jetliner veered off a runway after landing amid thunderstorms and exploded into flames, at the airport in the capital Khartoum, Sudan late Tuesday, June 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Abd Raouf)
-
The remains of a Sudanese jetliner smolders after it veered off a runway after landing amid thunderstorms and exploded into flames, at the airport in the capital Khartoum, Sudan late Tuesday, June 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Abd Raouf)
-
A plane burst into flames after apparently veering off a runway at an airport in Sudan. (CBS)
-
Rescuers attend the scene where a Sudanese jetliner veered off a runway after landing amid thunderstorms and exploded into flames, at the airport in the capital Khartoum, Sudan late Tuesday, June 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Abd Raouf)
-
-
Interactive Air Disasters Review the worst air disasters in the past four decades, see how safety officials investigate plane crashes and more.
-
Fast Facts Sudan Learn about the people, economy and history.
- Stories
- Sudan Plane Crash Kills 116
More than half of the 214 people on board were able to escape but authorities say it is still unclear how many died in the inferno. Officials say dozens were killed.
Police spokesman Maj. Gen. Mohammed Abdel Majid al-Tayeb told the official SUNA news agency Wednesday morning that the fire has been completely extinguished and civil defense officials were now examining the wreckage to determine the causes of the crash.
The Civil Aviation Authority confirmed that 103 passengers and all 11 crew members survived. In addition, it said some other passengers may have gone home directly after the crash making an exact count difficult. Officials said most aboard were Sudanese.
Civil aviation has also asked its counterpart in Amman, Jordan, the origin of the flight, for the passenger manifest to determine who was actually on the flight as the original was destroyed in the crash, SUNA reported.
Death toll reports conflicted. State TV initially said about 100 were killed, but officials later put the toll at dozens without being more precise. Deputy parliament speaker Mohammed al-Hassan al-Ameen said "about 30 people" died, while police spokesman al-Tayeb said 23 bodies were brought to the morgue.
An Associated Press reporter at the scene said the Sudan Airways jetliner appeared to have left the runway after landing at Khartoum International Airport, and several loud explosions resounded as fire raced through the aircraft.
The roaring blaze dwarfed the Airbus A310's shattered fuselage as firefighters sprayed water, Sudanese TV footage showed. Ambulances and firetrucks rushed to the scene, and media were kept away.
A survivor speaking at the airport to Sudanese TV said the landing was "rough," and there was a sharp impact several minutes later.
"The right wing was on fire," said the passenger, who did not give his name. He said smoke got into the cockpit and some people started opening the emergency exits. Soon, fire engulfed the plane, he said.
As we landed, the engine burst into flame — I was sitting right next to it... It was horror inside the plane.
Kamal Eddin Mohammed, passengerThe cause of the accident wasn't immediately known and there were differing reports on the role weather played.
A sandstorm had hit the area with 20 mph winds between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. and there was a thunderstorm and similar winds at the time of the crash around 9 p.m. local time, said Elaine Yang, a meteorologist with the San Francisco-based Weather Underground, a private weather service.
The head of Sudanese police, Mohammad Najib, said bad weather "caused the plane to crash land, split into two and catch fire."
Youssef Ibrahim, director of the Khartoum airport, disputed that bad weather was to blame and told Sudanese TV that the plane "landed safely" and the pilot was talking to the control tower and getting further instructions when the accident occurred.
"One of the (plane's) engines exploded and the plane caught fire," Ibrahim said. He blamed the accident on technical problems, but didn't elaborate.
Due to inclement weather, the aircraft stopped at Port Sudan Airport along the Red Sea, picking up 35 passengers and refueling before heading to Khartoum.
Sudan has a poor aviation safety record. In May, a plane crash in a remote area of southern Sudan killed 24 people, including key members of the southern Sudanese government. In July 2003, a Sudan Airways Boeing 737 en route from Port Sudan to Khartoum crashed soon after takeoff, killing all 115 people on board.
The Airbus A310 is a twin-engine, widebody plane used by a number of carriers around the world. Typically configured with about 220 seats, it is a shorter version of the popular A300.
An Airbus spokesman in Paris declined immediate comment on the crash.
In July 2006, an A310 operated by Russia's S7 Airlines went off the runway after landing in Irkutsk, smashed into adjacent buildings and caught fire, killing 123 of the 203 people aboard.
Although deaths from air travel have fallen over the past two years, the number of serious jetliner accidents increased last year for the first time in a decade, according to a report last month by the International Air Transport Association. Nearly half of all jet accidents occurred on landing in 2007.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- FAA winks and nods, permitting Airtech to vend hazardous aircraft parts to the world%u2019s fleet. Yesterday a plane explodes, burns and crashes in Sudan. Some blame rain. Others blame yet-unspecified technical problems. Does the media have a journalistic or other moral obligation to prove or disprove the potential link? And if not %u2013 then who?
- Reply to this comment
- lovesamerica,,,, You ever think about Loving America enough to solve the problems or prevent them from happening ????
- Reply to this comment
- lovesamerica,,,, Nasty ?? Not wiping your but is nasty, not cleaning up after your mess is nasty, a GOP that can''t clean up after the genocide they created is nasty.
- Reply to this comment
- guyfrompa45,,,, Oh, I see just some really bad moves ??? Over 4,000 American troops killed another 30,000 with severe problems, loss of America''s national security, loss of foreign strategic assets, on & on it goes ------- Just a few tiny mistakes anyone could make ???
- Reply to this comment
Re: "It would be like a reporter from New York making a report on an incident that happened in Phoenix, Arizona."
Posted by fsw3
They usually just make it up as they go along, so their location is not that important.- Reply to this comment
- FeelFreek4U -- a subhuman Arab, posing as a patriotic American.
Numerous Algerian Christians have been imprisoned recently for the unspeakable "crime" of ILLEGAL WORSHIP.
How much additional evidence for the Inhumanity of Islam do we need? - Reply to this comment
Re: "Now, all we need is a million more crashes like this in Sudan, and we''ll be that much closer to a perfect world."
Posted by FeelFreee4U
If any Muslims, non-whites, or others, would like to discuss this opinion with my white-supremacist/Zionist impersonator here, his name is Michael Totten, and he can be found at:
www.michaeltotten.com- Reply to this comment
- I pray for the victims and their families.
- Reply to this comment
- lovesamerica,,, We all love America, just not some of the things it''s involved in or the politics.
You should be more shocked at the callousness of some ''''human'''' beings who got us into an uneccessary war who now have the gumtion to say democrats will cause a genocied in Iraq when republicans already caused the genocide - Reply to this comment
- An Airbus A310, That''s 2 Airbus problems in less than a week ----- Old Jhong McBush & hope you are paying attention, it''s part of your problem selling out Boeing for your foreign intrests.
- Reply to this comment
- What nasty people there are, I am not surprised,but reshocked at the callousness of some ''human'' beings
- Reply to this comment
- Now, all we need is a million more crashes like this in Sudan, and we''ll be that much closer to a perfect world.
- Reply to this comment
- To paraphrase Animal House:
Fat dumb and racist is no way to go through life jboxton. - Reply to this comment
- That what you get when you dont extinguish your cigarrets before landing.
- Reply to this comment
- Sudan is in Africa...not the middle east...idiot.
- Reply to this comment
- FINALLY! Some good news comes out of the middle east!
- Reply to this comment
International recording artist Shakira on love, career and more.




