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Thursday, 23 May 2013

Homes searched in Indonesian crash that killed 11

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Reported by: AP/UNBconnect
Reported on: June 22, 2012 09:50 AM
Reported in: International

JAKARTA, June 22 (AP/UNB) - Rescuers Friday resumed searching burned-out houses struck by an Indonesian air force plane that crashed into the military housing complex and ignited a huge fireball in the capital, killing 11 people.

The dead were two children, their grandmother and an aunt in one of the eight damaged homes, and the seven people on the plane - the pilot, co-pilot and five trainees.

The Fokker F-27 was making a routine training flight when it crashed in a neighborhood in eastern Jakarta about 1.5 kilometers (nearly a mile) from the runway where it was trying to land, the military said.

Raging orange flames jumped several meters into the air and a huge column of black smoke billowed over the homes. Eleven people were injured.

"I could hardly believe my eyes. There was a military plane that crashed and hit the houses!" said Hendra, a resident of the air force complex who goes by only one name. "At once, the situation turned into chaos. All the residents fled in panic.

Women and children were screaming hysterically."

He said he helped at least five injured people, mostly with burns, to a nearby air force hospital.
Six of the people aboard the plane died instantly, and the co-pilot died later while being treated at a hospital, air force spokesman Rear Adm. Azman Yunus said.

The plane broke into two parts as it ripped through the houses and plummeted to the ground, said air force spokesman Col. Agus Sasongko Jati. The fatalities on the ground were two children in one of the houses, aged 2 and 6, and their grandmother and aunt who were visiting, he added.

The aircraft, which was built in 1958 and has been used by Indonesia's air force for the past 35 years with 14,900 flight hours, was declared airworthy before it took off for its second training flight of the day under clear skies, he said.

"It seemed that the pilot was trying to land on a nearby paddy field," Jati told The Associated Press. "But it was not clear whether it was because of an emergency."

He said the illfated military plane was not equipped with black box.

Rescuers were searching for more possible victims among the charred rubble of the burning houses, and a number of ambulances were parked inside the air force's Rajawali Complex.

The crash comes after a Russian Sukhoi passenger jet crashed last month into an Indonesian volcano during a demonstration flight for potential buyers, killing all 45 people aboard.

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