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March 17, 2007
Russian Airliner Crashes in Samara

Tu154wreckage-BBC.jpg
Wreckage of a Tupolev airliner that crashed in Ukraine last year (Photo by: AFP)

The Russian Emergency Situations Ministry is reporting that a passenger airliner crashed today while attempting to land at the Samara airport. At least seven people are dead and fifty one were injured in the crash. A spokeswoman for the Emergency Situations Ministry said that the pilots were trying to land in thick fog and a wing tip of the aircraft clipped the runway. Other officials have mentioned that the plane may have touched down 400 meters short of the runway. The flight was operated by the Russian airline UTAir.

Click on the extended post to read the full story from the CBS News website.

Tu134Jet.jpg
File photo of a Tupolev Tu-134 airliner

Original Article

7 Dead, 26 Injured In Russia Plane Crash
March 17, 2007 (AP)

MOSCOW - A Russian airliner made a crash landing Saturday in the Volga River city of Samara, killing five people and leaving 26 injured, a government official said.

Emergency Situations Ministry Spokesman Viktor Beltsov described the accident as a "hard landing" of a Tu-134 plane. The NTV television channel said the plane landed on its fuselage after the landing gear failed to come down.

A Russian airliner made a crash landing Saturday in the Volga River city of Samara, killing seven people, a government official said.

Emergency Situations Ministry Spokesman Viktor Beltsov described the accident as a "hard landing" of a Tu-134 plane. The NTV television channel said the plane landed on its fuselage after the landing gear failed to come down.

"The landing occurred in heavy fog and during touchdown a wing clipped the ground." said Irina Andrianova, a spokeswoman for the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry

But prosecutors, who were investigating the crash, cited possible pilot error, and said in a statement that the plane touched down too early, landing about 400 yards before the start of the runway.

The plane belonged to the Russian airline UTAir and had 57 people on board, Andrianova said. She said there was no fire after the crash, but had no further details about how the accident occurred.

Andrianova said seven people were killed, 26 were injured and hospitalized -- six of them in serious condition -- and the rest of the people on board were receiving psychological help. Earlier, officials had said 51 people had been injured, but they revised the figure, explaining that some were being treated for psychological shock.

Relatives waited at Samara airport for news, but one woman claimed that they had not been given enough information on the injured passengers.

"There was no information at all. They just gave us the telephone of the local government office in Tyumen and that of the police at the airport," said a woman whose sister and nephew were aboard the plane.

"There's no numbers for the hospital or anything," she added.

Samara is about 550 miles southeast of Moscow.

Authorities were investigating the cause of the incident, transport officials and prosecutors said.

Tu-134s, an ageing model, are widely used in the former Soviet Union. The plane that crashed was en route to Samara from Surgut, about 1,000 miles to the east.

The last major crash of a Russian airliner was on Aug. 22, when a Tu-154 of Pulkovo Airlines crashed in Ukraine, killing all 170 people aboard.

In July, an Airbus-310 of S7 airlines went off the runway after landing in Irkutsk, smashed into adjacent buildings and caught fire, killing 123 of the 203 people aboard. In May, an Armenian Airbus-320 crashed into the Black Sea while trying to land in the southern Russian city of Sochi, killing all 113 people aboard.

Click here to read Russia Blog's post about the plane crash last year in Irkutsk.



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1 Comment

Tragic and sad...

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Russia Blog presents up-to-date news, facts and commentary on the state of events in Russia and the former Soviet Union. The blog was created and is managed by Yuri Mamchur, Director of Discovery Institute's Real Russia Project, Executive Director of the World Russia Forum, and a Vanderbilt University MBA graduate.


 






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