Tragic: Plane crashes in Havelian, 48 feared dead - UPDATES MEDIA NG

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Thursday, December 8, 2016

Tragic: Plane crashes in Havelian, 48 feared dead


A plane belonging to Pakistan International Airways (PIA) has crashed in Islamabad

The plane crashed near town of Havelian in Abbottabad

There were 48 people aboard, all feared dead

All 48 people on board, including two children, believed dead

Junaid Jamshed, celebrated pop star-turned cleric, among dead

Guardian UK reports that plane carrying 48 people, including one of Pakistan’s most famous singers, has crashed on its approach to Islamabad from Chitral, a mountainous region popular with tourists.

Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) said a small turboprop ATR-42 had lost contact with aircraft controllers shortly before police confirmed that an aircraft had crashed near the town of Havelian.

Havelian lies 30 miles north of the capital’s airport and far away from the high peaks of the Hindu Kush mountain range in which Chitral is nestled.

The army said it had dispatched troops and helicopters to the scene, but an official told Reuters there were unlikely to be any survivors. “All of the bodies are burned beyond recognition. The debris is scattered,” said Taj Muhammad Khan. Images shown on Pakistani TV channels and circulated on social media showed a trail of wreckage engulfed in flames on a mountain slope.

The military said 40 bodies had been recovered in a rescue effort involving about 500 soldiers, doctors and paramedics.
Kurshid Tanoli, a police official in Havelian, said recovery work was hampered by a fire at the crash site and the hilly terrain.

“The nearest village to the site is Batolani and is deep in the hills,” he said. “Vehicles and ambulances can only go to Batolani and then it is a 30-minute walk.”

Local media say Junaid Jamshed, a pop star turned evangelical Muslim cleric and fashion designer, was on board the plane.

A manifest for flight PK661, obtained by local media, showed that in addition to five crew and a ground engineer there were 42 passengers on board, including Junaid Jamshed, a pop star turned evangelical Muslim cleric and fashion designer, who ran a successful chain of boutiques across the country.

Also on board, according to the manifest, was Osama Warraich, the senior civilian bureaucrat for Chitral, who was travelling to Islamabad with his wife and son.
Pakistan’s last major air disaster was in 2015 when a military helicopter crashed in a remote northern valley, killing eight people including the Norwegian, Philippine and Indonesian envoys and the wives of Malaysian and Indonesian envoys.

The country’s deadliest crash was in 2010, when an Airbus 321 operated by the private airline Airblue and flying from Karachi crashed into hills outside Islamabad while about to land, killing all 152 on board.

The government has vowed to privatise troubled PIA, the national carrier, which has been losing money.

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