India plane crash in Mangalore leaves about 160 dead
May 22, 2010 05:59 pm
Nearly 160 people are feared dead after a passenger jet
crashed on landing in the southern Indian city of
The plane overshot the hilltop runway as it tried to land and burst into flames in a forested valley beyond. Survivors said they thought they heard what sounded like a tyre bursting just before the crash.
Speaking to Indian TV from his hospital bed, survivor Umer Farooq said he heard a loud thud as the plane touched down.
“Then the plane veered off toward some trees on the side and then the cabin filled with smoke. I got caught in some cables but managed to scramble out,” he said.
Mr Farooq was being treated for burns to his arms, legs, and face.
All the passengers on the flight were Indian nationals, with
many returning from jobs in the Gulf to visit their families, says the BBC’s
Sanjoy Majumder in
The airline said the plane overshot the runway as it came into land at about 0600 (0030 GMT) and crashed into a wooded valley. A light, pre-monsoon rain was reported to be falling at the time.
Mangalore airport is located at the top of a hill with a forested valley at the end of the runway. Analysts say it presents challenges for pilots. TV pictures showed rescue workers and local villagers scrambling on steep hillsides to search the smoking wreckage.
A Mangalore police official told the BBC that smoke from the crash site had made it difficult for rescue workers to gain access to the plane.
Another Mangalore police official told the BBC that 120 bodies had been recovered, some burned beyond recognition.
One of the survivors, K.P. Manikutty, said the landing had at first appeared to be smooth and then the plane had crashed with no warning.
“Immediately on touching the ground, the aircraft jerked and in a few moments hit something,” he said.
“Then it split in the middle and caught fire. I just jumped from the gap,” he added.
Local media named the pilot as Serbian Zlatko Glusica. He was said to have 10,000 hours of flying time, including experience of Mangalore’s airport.
AFP news agency said Mr. Glusica also had British citizenship.
It is not known what caused the crash. The pilot gave no distress call to the control tower, said V.P. Agarwal, the head of the Airport Authority of India. He also said visibility was not a problem.
“The visibility was six kilometres (four miles) when the aircraft approached the runway which was more than sufficient,” Mr Agarwal said. – (BBC News)