British, French, and Cypriot aircraft joined rescue crews searching the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Lebanon, where an Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed with ninety people aboard. By midday on Monday, crews had found 23 bodies, but no survivors, the state-run Lebanese National News Agency reported. Prime Minister Saad Hariri announced a day of mourning for the victims of the crash, ordering all government departments to close, the agency reported. He praised security forces and the Red Cross for their efforts in the aftermath of the accident.
Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 left Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut about 2:30 a.m. and was headed to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. It disappeared from radar a few minutes after takeoff, said Ghazi El Aridi, Lebanon's minister of public works and transportation. Authorities did not immediately know the cause of the crash. "We don't believe that there is any indication for sabotage or foul play," Lebanese President Michel Sulayman said.
The airline said a fourteen-member team of investigators was at the scene of the accident. "We want to figure out the reasons behind this plane crash and we will be very transparent in informing everyone of what happened," Hariri said.
The Boeing 737-800 had seven crew members and 82 passengers, including 51 Lebanese nationals, 23 Ethiopians, two Britons, and citizens from Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Canada, Russia, and France, the airline said. The plane crashed about 3.5 km (2.1 miles) west of the town of Na'ameh. Na'ameh is 15 km (9 miles) south of Beirut. An earlier tally provided by the Lebanese government varied slightly. Among the passengers was the wife of the French ambassador to Lebanon, according to Anne Charlotte of the French embassy.
As worried family members gathered at the Beirut airport for news, the army and the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon continued to scour the crash site for survivors. "We hope that we will be able to rescue survivors, but the weather conditions are very bad," Sulayman said.
Government-owned Ethiopian Airlines is one of the largest in Africa. Unlike several African carriers that are not allowed in European air space because of shoddy safety records, Ethiopian Airlines serves Europe. It serves three other continents as well, for a total of 56 destinations. The airline has such a commendable safety record that some expanding airlines in Asia have lured away its pilots at high pay, The New York Times reported in 2006. The airline has experienced two fatal crashes since 1980. In November of 1996, a flight bound for the Ivory Coast, aka the Cote D'Ivoire, was hijacked by three men who demanded that the pilot fly to Australia. Attempting an emergency landing near the Comoros Islands off Africa as the plane ran out of fuel, it crashed. About 130 of the 172 people aboard died, according to published reports. In September of 1988, a flight struck a flock of birds during takeoff. During the crash landing that followed, 31 people of the 105 people aboard died.
25 January 2010
Oops is now an airline term
Cal Perry and Nada Husseini have a CNN article about the latest airliner to go down:
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