Friday, October 17, 2008

Plane crash in Nepal kills 18, official says


A small airplane crashed and caught fire Wednesday as it tried to land in foggy weather at a tiny mountain airport near Mount Everest, killing 18 people, including 16 tourists from Germany, Australia and Nepal, officials said.
Witnesses raced onto the tarmac in search of survivors but only one person, the pilot, survived.
The 19-seat Yeti Airlines DeHavilland DHC-6 Twin Otter, which had taken off from the capital, Katmandu, snagged its wheels on a security fence during its landing at Lukla airport, about 40 miles (60 kilometers) from Mount Everest, said Mohan Adhikari, general manager of the Katmandu airport.
The plane caught fire and came to a stop within the airport grounds, Adhikari said.
A fog had descended on the airport just before the crash, said Suraj Kunwar, who was at Lukla waiting for a flight when the crash happened.
"Suddenly there was a big bang, and flames came out of the plane," he said, adding that people rushed from the airport terminal to help, but it was quickly clear there was little they could do.
"All the passengers waiting for planes ran to help douse the flames, but the passengers were already dead," he said.
Adhikari said 19 people were on board the plane, including 12 German, two Australian and two Nepalese tourists. There were also three Nepalese crew members, including a pilot, co-pilot and flight attendant. The pilot was flown to Katmandu and hospitalized in critical condition though Vijay Shreshta, executive director of Yeti Airlines, said his injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.
The visibility at the airport was about 1,310 feet (400 meters), just enough for the aircraft's landing, he said.
The bodies of the crash victims were flown back to Katmandu by military helicopter and were unloaded by soldiers wearing jungle camouflage.
The tiny Lukla airport, little more than a runway carved from the side of the Himalayas at an altitude of 2,800 meters (9,200 feet), is an important jumping-off point for trekkers beginning their hikes and mountaineers heading to Everest.
The walk takes several days from there to Mount Everest Base Camp.
The airport is famous among travelers for its dramatic scenery, its stomach-lurching landings — and its occasional crashes. The end of the runway has a steep drop of a few hundred meters (feet).
In 2005, nine passengers and three crew members survived a crash in a small Gorkha Airlines plane with minor injuries.

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