Officials, emergency and Red
Cross workers are seen at the crash site of an ADC Airlines airplane in
Abuja, October 29, 2006. [ Reuters]
|
A Nigerian passenger jet crashed shortly after takeoff from the capital Abuja
on Sunday, killing 99 people including the leader of the nation's 70 million
Muslims.
Officials
said 106 people were on board the Boeing 737 flight to the northern city of
Sokoto when it ploughed into a corn field about 2 km (1 mile) from the
runway.
Seven people survived the crash. It brought the number killed in Nigerian air
accidents to at least 335 in the last year.
A Reuters correspondent saw burned bodies, some missing limbs or heads, being
loaded onto trucks from the smouldering remains of the fuselage.
Only the plane's tail, an engine and part of a wing were still recognisable
at the crash site, an area the size of a football field littered with body
parts, smouldering fires and shreds of clothes, bags and metal.
"The smell is something you don't want to remember," said
Steve Noble, a British diplomat at the scene.
Among the dead was Ibrahim Muhammadu, who as Sultan of Sokoto was the leader
of the Muslim community which makes up about half of Africa's most populous
nation.
"The plane crash that happened in Abuja led to the death of our beloved
Sultan ... among about 100 people," the governor of Sokoto state, Attahiru
Bafarawa, told reporters.
The late news bulletin on state television showed images of the sultan's
coffin being buried in Sokoto by a crowd of men in white robes. His son, a
senator, also died in the crash.
The Sokoto governor declared six days of mourning for the sultan, who was
also the top traditional ruler of northern Nigeria. A respected figure, he
helped to curb religious bloodshed in the central state of Plateau in 2004.
Survivors
The director of Abuja's National Hospital, speaking on state television, said
seven survivors had been brought in, of whom six were in a stable condition and
one was in intensive care.
The minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nasir el-Rufai, said the crash
took place in bad weather but added that only a detailed investigation could
determine the cause.
ADC is a popular domestic airline with an ageing fleet of Boeing jets.
It was the fourth significant air crash in Nigeria in just over a year.
On October 22 last year, 117 people died when a Bellview Airlines Boeing 737
crashed in the countryside shortly after takeoff from the commercial capital
Lagos.
Seven weeks later, a Sosoliso Airlines DC9 crashed on landing in Port
Harcourt, the oil industry hub in the southeast. The crash killed 106 people,
half of whom were children on their way home from boarding school for the
Christmas break.
And on September 17 this year, 10 army generals and three other military
personnel were killed when a small air force plane crashed in central Benue
state.
The latest tragedy comes a month before the aviation industry is due to
undergo an audit. After last year's crashes, President Olusegun Obasanjo had
ordered airlines and aviation authorities to improve safety standards.
Air traffic in Nigeria has more than doubled to over 8 million passengers a
year in the last seven years, but the ageing airports and fleets have struggled
to cope with the boom.
Abuja airport remained open on Sunday, with flights arriving and leaving as
usual even though emergency vehicles were racing across the tarmac on their way
to and from the crash site.