A Nigerian airliner crashed into a densely populated district of the northern city of Kano on Saturday, killing at least 116 people, including 40 on the ground, aviation officials said. The airliner, bound for the commercial capital Lagos, crashed as it took off from Kano's airport, plowing into shacks and a mosque and starting a number of fires, the officials said.
"There were 69 passengers and seven crew members on board," an official of the Federal Aviation Authority of Nigeria told Reuters, correcting earlier reports of 105 on the plane. (Read photo caption)
"All passengers and crew are feared dead," he added.
A fire service official said dozens of people were killed in their homes when the twin-engined BAC 1-11-500 operated by EAS Airlines crashed into the impoverished residential district of Gwammaja.
"Ten buildings were hit by the plane. As of now the bodies of about 40 people have been recovered from the houses," he said.
The aviation official said the plane had stopped over in Kano on a flight from the central city of Jos. Airport officials said earlier it crashed as it came in to land from Jos.
Poorly equipped fire crews and other emergency workers battled flames and thick smoke from the smashed buildings, which included a school.
A Christening ceremony was taking place in one of the houses when the plane plowed through it, witnesses said.
The last major Nigerian air crash occurred in November 1996, when a Nigerian Boeing 727 flying from Port Harcourt to Lagos crashed, killing all 142 passengers and nine crew members.
PHOTO CAPTION
A Nigerian airliner on a domestic flight crashed in the northern city of Kano and burst into flames on May 4, 2002, with 105 people on board, airport officials and witnesses said. Witnesses said at least two survivors were taken from the wreckage of the BAC 111-500 aircraft, which crashed and caught fire as it came in to land on a flight from Jos, in central Nigeria. (Reuters Graphic)
116 Killed in Nigeria Plane Crash
- Author: Reuters
- Publish date:04/05/2002
- Section:WORLD HEADLINES