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Airliner crash kills 54 near Baotou
A China Eastern plane crashed yesterday shortly after it took off from an airport in North China, killing 54.
President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and Vice-Premier Huang Ju have shown their concern for the dead and ordered a thorough investigation into the accident and measures to prevent such tragedies. The small CRJ-200 aircraft supplied by Canadian-based Bombardier Aerospace fell to the ground at about 8:20 am, only about a dozen seconds after it had taken off from Baotou in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. China Eastern Airlines has suspended all flights on its Bombardier-supplied planes for the moment, according to Xinhua. The plane, which had been scheduled to fly from Baotou to China's eastern metropolis of Shanghai, crashed into a frozen lake in Baotou's Nanhai Park.
Wang Yongqiang, a resident who lives near Nanhai park was watching local people's wintertime swimming, when he said he was taken aback by a plane plummeting from the sky with thick black smoke coming from its tail section. The plane seemed to stall for a few seconds and dropped to the lake with an explosion, Wang was quoted by Xinhua News Agency as saying. "Smoke and flames rose to 100 metres in height," he said. Local firefighters received the report of the accident at 8:24 am, said Guo Tierui, a press official with the Fire Department of Baotou Public Security Bureau.
The man who died on the ground was reportedly a worker at the Nanhai Park. His body was discovered near a park ticket office. The remains of all 53 victims on the plane were retrieved from the lake. But the flight data recorders, or so-called black boxes, typically installed aboard airliners have not yet been found. Shortly after the accident was reported, local officials arrived to organize recovery operations. More than 400 people, including local firefighters, police officers, park staff and a 20-member dive team from Baotou Iron and Steel, a major steel producer based in the city, have joined the effort. Several hours after the tragedy, an investigative team flew from Beijing to Baotou to handle the case. Included are Wang Xianzheng, head of the State Work Safety Administration and Wang Changchun, deputy chief of the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC), according to CAAC officials. The doomed plane belonged to the airlines' subsidiary in Southwest China's Yunnan Province. It is the first plane crash that occurred in Inner Mongolia in 45 years,
according to the regional work safety administrative office. Early Sunday morning, a Bombardier CRJ-200 of the China Eastern Airlines crashed at the suburb of Baotou City, north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, seconds after it took off for the eastern China metropolis Shanghai, killing 53 people aboard and one more on the ground. Hu said he felt very grieved when hearing of the accident and expressed his deep and sincere condolences. "The related authorities must appropriately handle the remaining problems, find out the causes of the accident and prevent further occurrence of similar accidents," said Hu, who is on visit abroad. In order to organize and guide the accident rescue and investigation work, the State Council had sent a special team Sunday moon over to Baotou. The team members are from some seven central departments. Premier Wen Jiabao, Vice-Premier Huang Ju and State Councilor Hua Jianmin have also given instructions requiring to promptly carry out the rescue and investigation work and urging the Inner Mongolia regional government to actively cooperate with the team. Till the press time, the team has joined a local emergency handling group and
started work at the accident site. |
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