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Kenya plane crashes in Cameroon
(BBC,Reuters,
East African Standard, eTN ) A Kenya
Airways plane with 114 people on board
has reportedly crashed in southern
Cameroon. The flight, which originated in Ivory
Coast, was reported missing on Saturday
after it failed to arrive in Kenya.
Cameroon state radio said the plane came
down south of Douala, although Kenya
Airways has only confirmed so far that
it is missing.
People from at least 23 different
nationalities were on board, the airline
said.
Kenya's national carrier has a good
safety record. However, 169 people died
when one of its planes crashed in 2000.
The BBC's Karen Allen in Kenya's
capital, Nairobi, says the Boeing
737-800 involved in Saturday's incident
was just six months old and was part of
a new fleet bought by the airline.
Our correspondent says it will raise
questions of whether other aircraft will
be taken out of service.
Bad weather
Flight KQ 507 originated in Abidjan, in
Ivory Coast, and left Douala, in
Cameroon, at 0005 local time (0105 GMT)
on Saturday. It was due to arrive in
Nairobi at 0615 (0315 GMT).
Kenya Airways said the last
communication with the missing plane was
received by the control tower in Douala,
on Cameroon's coast, shortly after
take-off.
Cameroon radio initially said the plane
came down near Niete, south along the
coast from Douala, although spotter
helicopters were later searching for
wreckage further inland - near the town
of Lolodorf.
"The search location has now been
centred around 100kms (62 miles)
south-west of [Cameroon's capital]
Yaounde," Kenyan Airways chief executive
Titus Naikuni told a news conference.
He said an extensive search of the area
by low-flying aircraft had found
nothing, and a second search team was on
its way to the site.
Mr Naikuni said the search and rescue
operation was proving to be difficult
because it was taking place in the
heavily-wooded terrain.
Kenyan Transport Minister Chirau Ali
Makwere - who is leading a team of Kenya
Airways and government officials to
Douala - said it was too early to
determine what had happened to the
plane.
"We need to get information from the
technical experts as to whether it was
occasioned by the weather or pilot error
or mechanical fault," he was quoted by
the Associated Press as saying.
A crisis management centre has been set
up in Nairobi.
Five Britons were reportedly among the
passengers, including Anthony Mitchell,
a respected and well-known Associated
Press journalist based in Nairobi.
There has been no confirmation from the
Foreign Office.
There have been distressing scenes at
Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International
Airport where a number of worried
friends and relatives have gathered.
"We can only hope for the best and
pray... We're anxious and desperate,"
one man said.
The Kenya Airways website says the fleet
is 23 strong. It is 26%-owned by Air
France KLM's Dutch company KLM.
In January 2000 a Kenya Airways plane
crashed into the sea after taking off
from Abidjan airport in Ivory Coast
killing 169 people. There were 10
survivors. |