According to eyewitness report, the plane was trying to make
a second landing attempt when it crashed.
See details below after the cut:
Authorities are investigating whether human error or
technical failure caused a Russian airliner flying from Moscow to Kazan to
crash Sunday, killing all 50 people on board.
The Boeing 737 belonging to the Tatarstan airlines crashed
on the runway about 7:25 p.m. local time while landing Sunday at Kazan
International Airport, about 450 miles east of Moscow. There were 44 passengers
and six crewmembers on board, Emergency Ministers spokeswoman Irina Rossius
said, according to the Associated Press.
The plane was trying to make a second landing attempt when
it touched the surface of the runway near the control tower and was
"destroyed and caught fire," said Sergei Izvolky, spokesman for the
Russian aviation agency.
Law enforcement officials told news agency Interfax that
technical failure and human error may have been responsible for the crash.
Preliminary information suggests that pilots may have informed air control that
the plane was not ready to land when it was still about 550 yards from the
runway, indicating equipment may not have been working properly.
The ITAR-TASS news agency reported Russian President
Vladimir Putin has ordered a special government commission to investigate the
cause of the crash. Meanwhile, authorities have launched a criminal
investigation into the crash over alleged safety violations, with RIA Novosti
reporting that Russia's official transportation watchdog, Rostransnadzor, is
looking into the airline.
Investigative committee spokesman Vladimir Markin told
ITAR-TASS that investigators "will check all possible causes, including
pilot error, technical failure and weather conditions."
Light precipitation with winds of about 18 mph were reported
around the time of the crash.
Victims on board the flight include Irek Minnikhanov, 23,
son of the president of the Russian republic of Tatarstan, and Alexander
Antonov, regional head of the Federal Security Service, the state-run Rossiiskaya
Gazeta reported.
Russia has seen a string of deadly crashes in recent years,
the most recent of which happened in December when a plane careened off a
runway at a Moscow airport and slammed into the slope of a nearby highway,
killing five. In 2011, a crash in Yaroslavl killed 44 people, including a
professional hockey team.
Courtesy of: The Associated Press
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