Missing Afghan jet found; 104 believed dead
Saturday, February 5, 2005
On Saturday NATO and Afghan troops located the wreckage of the Kam Air Boeing 737 missing since Thursday.
Afghan interior ministry spokesman Latfullah Mashal announced the discovery. "The debris of the plane was found around 25 kilometers east of Kabul in a mountainous area called Band-e Ghazi."
The jet had been enroute to Kabul from Herat when it was diverted due to heavy snow. The crew then sought clearance to land across the border in Peshawar, Pakistan before it lost contact with air control. 104 persons are reported to have been aboard, including 8 crew members; there are no signs of survivors reported.
The weather conditions have hampered search and rescue efforts. NATO-operated helicopters located the crash site. Afghan police and units from Afghanistan's foreign peacekeeping force are investigating the scene of the crash, according to Mr. Mashal.
Sources
edit- Michael Kitchen. "Missing Afghan Passenger Jet Found Crashed in Mountains" — Voice of America, 05 February 2005
- Ahmad Masood. "Afghan Plane Wreckage Found, No Survivors" — Reuters, Sat Feb 5, 2005 08:56 AM ET
- "Afghan plane wreckage found" — CBC News, Sat, 05 Feb 2005 08:33:42 EST