An airliner carrying 117 passengers and crew crashed shortly after take-off from Nigeria's largest city and it was unclear if there were any survivors, officials said yesterday.
Abilola Oloko, a spokesperson for Oyo State where the plane crashed on Saturday after leaving Lagos, said that over half of those on board had survived. But he later asserted that "the latest reports coming to us say that all the people on the plane died."
He cited confusion at the crash scene for the conflicting reports, which could not be immediately verified.
Lagos police spokesperson Bode Ojajuni said search teams located the crashed Boeing 737 aircraft, operated by Nigerian-run Bellview Airlines, near the town of Kishi, about 200 kilometers north of Lagos.
The plane lost contact with the control tower 5 minutes after taking off from Murtala Muhammed international airport in Lagos at 8:45 PM local time on Saturday, said Jide Ibinola, a spokesperson for the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria.
There was no immediate word on the cause of the crash or if flight-data recorders had been located at the scene. The flight is popular among Nigerians and expatriates shuttling between Lagos and the capital, Abuja.
Representatives of many countries gathered at Lagos airport to find out if any of their citizens were on board the doomed flight. Each stressed it was a routine matter and that they had no news themselves.
Airline officials said 117 people were on board including 111 passengers and six crew members.
Ibinola said the craft was headed to Abuja on what was supposed to have been a 50-minute flight. There was no immediate indication the crash was terrorism-related.
President Olusegun Obasanjo's office said in a statement that the leader was personally overseeing search and rescue operations.
The Nigerian leader asked "all Nigerians to pray for all those aboard the plane and their families," the statement said.
Officials said earlier that the military had mounted a nighttime helicopter search off the west African coast as state television reported that pilots issued a distress call before the plane disappeared from radar about 24 kilometers west of Lagos over the Atlantic Ocean. There was no explanation for why the wreckage was found inland.
Bellview, one of about a dozen local airlines plying Nigeria's skies, is a privately owned Nigerian company that operates a fleet of mostly Boeing 737s on internal routes and throughout West Africa. Bellview first began flying about 10 years ago and has not suffered a crash before.
Many consider Bellview to be among the most reliable airlines shuttling between Nigeria's often chaotic regional airports, which can resemble bus depots where crowds battle for seats on planes.
In May 2002, an EAS Airlines jet ploughed into a heavily populated neighborhood after take-off at the airport outside the northern city of Kano, killing 154 people in the plane and on the ground.
(China Daily October 24, 2005)
|