LOLODORF, Cameroon - Fog and thick forest reduced visibility to about 200
yards Sunday morning as rescuers prepared to resume the search in southern
Cameroon for a Kenya-bound flight that crashed with 114 people on board after
sending out a distress signal, officials said.
Relatives of a passenger on the Kenya Airways plane that
crashed in Cameroon mourn at the Jomo Kenyatta airport in Nairobi, Kenya,
Saturday, May 5, 2007. [AP]
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Rescuers suspended the search
because of heavy rains late Saturday. The rains had subsided by daybreak, but
fog persisted.
The jet bound for the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, went down early Saturday near
Lolodorf, about 90 miles southeast of the coastal city of Douala, where it had
taken off after midnight, said Alex Bayeck, a regional communications officer.
There was no word on survivors, Bayeck said by telephone Saturday en route to
the crash site.
On Saturday, search planes flew over the forested area where the airliner
gave off a distress signal, but no wreckage has been spotted.
The search continued on the ground into the night, but helicopters could not
operate effectively in the dark, said Jean Francois Villong, a local official
coordinating the rescue effort. The helicopters would start again Sunday
morning, he said, and more rescue workers including security forces were
expected. Much of Saturday's searching was done by volunteers from local
villages, he said.
Relatives and colleagues of those aboard were making their way to the remote
area, which has few roads and is dotted by small villages. Some expressed a
willingness to search themselves but acknowledged they did not know how to begin
in the tough conditions.
"It is very difficult because this area is very mountainous and heavily
forested. And we suspect the plane may have fallen into a valley," Villong said.
Infrastructure is poor in Cameroon's interior, with much of the area being
searched only accessible by dirt tracks that turn to impassable mud in the rainy
season. The country of 17 million on Africa's western coast has oil reserves and
lush farmland but many of its citizens remain poor subsistence farmers.
Residents in the area reported hearing a "large boom" during the previous
night, Bayeck said, and some people said they saw a flash of fire that looked
markedly different from lightning.
Close to a dozen ambulances stood ready in Lolodorf on Saturday, and a
handful of family members of passengers gathered in the city center. Some said
they had traveled as far as 250 miles in tough conditions that day.
"I don't know what to do. I'm just terribly confused. My younger sister
boarded this plane that is supposed to have crashed. I hope we can still find
her alive," said Innocent Bonu, a lawyer from the southwestern town of Buea.
In Kenya, Kenya Airways CEO Titus Naikuni held back on confirming the crash
"until we see the plane - until then, it's missing," he said.
The distress call, he said was issued automatically - "from a machine, not a
pilot" - but he noted a crash is not the only reason a plane issues an automatic
distress signal.
Boeing spokesman Jim Proulx said the plane that crashed was equipped with an
emergency transmitter that sends out an automatic locator signal "in the event
of a rapid change in velocity."
Proulx told The Associated Press by telephone from Seattle, Wash., that the
transmitter would have been activated upon impact, and can also be turned on by
the plane's flight crew.
Naikuni said the plane, which was almost new, took off an hour late because
of rain. Douala airport officials confirmed thunderstorms at the time of
takeoff, but said that was unlikely to have been the sole cause of the accident.
"There was a thunderstorm, but there were other planes that left after (the
Kenya Airways flight to Nairobi) that had no problems," said Thomas Sobatam,
head of weather observation at the airport.
The Boeing 737-800 was carrying 114 people, including 105 passengers from at
least 23 countries, Kenyan airline officials said. A Nairobi-based Associated
Press correspondent, Anthony Mitchell, was believed to be among them. Mitchell
had been on assignment in the region for the past week.
"Anthony ... had contacted his family before boarding the flight to let them
know he was headed home," AP Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll said. "We hope
for the best."
The flight departed Douala at 12:05 a.m. and was to have arrived in Nairobi
at 6:15 a.m. The flight originated in Ivory Coast and stopped in Cameroon to
pick up more passengers, the airline said.
The Douala-Nairobi flight runs several times a week and commonly is used as
an intermediary flight to Europe and the Middle East. Kenya Airways - considered
one of the safest airlines in Africa - said most passengers were planning to
transfer to ongoing flights in Nairobi.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a team to
assist Cameroon in its investigation of the crash.
Boeing's Proulx said there have not been any safety concerns with
Chicago-based Boeing's fleet of 737-800s. About 2,000 737-800s are in use around
the world.
The last crash of an international Kenya Airways flight was on Jan. 30, 2000,
when Flight 431 was taking off from Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on its way to Nairobi.
Investigators blamed a faulty alarm and pilot error for that crash, which killed
169 people.