Rescuers Pull Bodies Out From Wreckage Of Nepal Plane

Nepali rescuers on Monday evening retrieved about 16 bodies from the mangled wreckage of a passenger plane strewn across a mountainside that crashed last week in the Himalayas with 22 people on board.

Africa Today News, New York recalls that air traffic control had lost contact with the Twin Otter aircraft operated by Nepali carrier Tara Air shortly after taking off from Pokhara in western Nepal on Sunday morning which was enroute Jomsom, a popular trekking destination.

Helicopters operated by the military and private firms braved poor weather to scour the remote mountainous area all day Sunday, aided by teams on foot, but called off the fruitless search when night fell.

After resuming on Monday, the army shared on social media a photo of aircraft parts and other debris littering a sheer mountainside, including a wing with the registration number 9N-AET clearly visible.

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‘So far, 16 bodies have been recovered and teams are searching for the remaining six. Chances of survival are low but our efforts continue to find them,’ Civil Aviation Authority spokesman Deo Chandra Lal Karn told AFP.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that there were about 60 people working at the crash site, including army, police, mountain guides and locals, most of whom trekked for miles on foot to get there.

The authority said that the plane “met an accident” at 14,500 feet (4,420 metres) in the Sanosware area of Thasang municipality in Mustang district.

“Analysing the pictures we received, it seems that the flight did not catch fire. Everything is scattered in the site. The flight seems to have collided with a big rock on the hill,” said Pokhara Airport spokesman Dev Raj Subedi.

Four Indians were onboard, as well as two Germans, with the remainder Nepalis including a computer engineer, his wife and their two daughters who had just returned from the United States.

The four Indians were a divorced couple and their daughter and son, aged 15 and 22, going on a family holiday, Indian police official Uttam Sonawane told AFP.

Africa Today News, New York

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