
Khartoum (Sudan): Sudanese state television
says that around 100 people were killed when
a plane exploded into fire after landing at
Khartoum's international airport on Wednesday.
There was no further official information
on the accident, but about 200 passengers
were thought to be aboard the plane when it
landed in bad weather and a higher casualty.
The Sudanese Airbus
carrying 214 people veered off the runway
in a thunderstorm and burst into flames
late Tuesday.
Officials said more
than 100 people fled the plane before it
was engulfed by towering orange flames.
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 with little apparent
effect, Sudanese TV footage showed. Ambulances
and firetrucks rushed to the scene, and
media were kept away.
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 crew helped them
through the emergency doors. Officials said
most aboard were Sudanese.
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 Mohammed Abdel Majid
al-Tayeb said 23 bodies were brought to
the morgue.
''There are missing
passengers who could be still inside the
plane, or left the aircraft but did not
inform officials,'' al-Tayeb said.
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.
The 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., said Elaine Yang, a meterologist
with the San Francisco-based Weather Underground,
a private weather service.
The Sudanese ambassador
to Washington called the weather ''very
bad'' and said the runway had been drenched
by rain.
''There was a lot of
water on the runway and they still tried
to land,'' Ambassador John Ukec Lueth Ukec
said.
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 caused the crash. He 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.
Raqeeb Abdel-Latif,
head of the Sudan Airways office in Damascus,
Syria, said the plane, which joined the
Sudanese national carrier seven months ago,
took off from Damascus and stopped in Amman,
Jordan, where 34 additional passengers came
on board.
Due to inclement weather,
the aircraft stopped at Port Sudan Airport
along the Red Sea, picking up 35 passengers
and refueling before heading back to Khartoum,
the Sudanese ambassador said in Washington.
Spokesmen for the Federal
Aviation Administration and the National
Transportation Safety Board in Washington
said they were monitoring the situation.
The Khartoum airport was shut down until
Wednesday morning, officials said.
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.
After that crash, Sudanese
officials blamed sanctions for restricting
vital aircraft parts. The U.S. State Department
said there was no ban on equipment needed
for aviation safety.
In 1997, then-President
Clinton issued an executive order barring
the export of goods and technology to Sudan
because of the country's ''support for international
terrorism, ongoing efforts to destabilize
neighboring governments, and the prevalence
of human rights violations.''
The U.N. Security Council
has imposed an embargo on providing arms
or military training to armed groups in
Sudan's Darfur region and a travel ban and
asset freeze on some people implicated in
the violence there.
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.