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Experts to comb site of Ukrainian airline crash in northern Greece

Greek media reported there were eight people on the plane and that it was carrying 12 tons of dangerous materials, mostly explosives

Debris is seen at the crash site of an Antonov An-12 cargo plane owned by a Ukrainian company, near Kavala, Greece, July 17, 2022. REUTERS

Debris is seen at the crash site of an Antonov An-12 cargo plane owned by a Ukrainian company, near Kavala, Greece, July 17, 2022. REUTERS

AP Palaichori

Experts were poised to search the site of an airplane crash in northern Greece early on Sunday to determine what kind of cargo it carried.

The An-12 cargo plane, which took off from the city of Nis, Serbia, on Saturday, and was headed to Amman, Jordan, crashed shortly before 11 pm local time, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of Kavala International Airport.

Minutes before, the pilot of the plane, which was operated by Ukrainian cargo carrier Meridian, had told air traffic controllers, that there was a problem with one of his engines and that he had to make an emergency landing. He was directed to Kavala airport but never made it there.

 

The plane is a Soviet-era four-engine turboprop cargo carrier.

Greek media reported there were eight people on the plane and that it was carrying 12 tons of dangerous materials, mostly explosives.

But local officials said they had no specific information on the cargo and provided slightly varying numbers of people on board.

Drone footage shows that small fragments are all that is left from the plane, which crashed in fields between two villages and dragged a small distance on the ground. Local residents reported seeing a fireball and hearing explosions for two hours after the crash. A plume of white smoke was still rising from the front end of the plane on Sunday morning.

Firefighters who rushed to the scene in the night were prevented from reaching the crash site by smoke and an intense smell which they feared might be toxic. Nearby residents were told to keep their windows shut all night, to not leave their homes and to wear masks. Authorities say they do not know if there were dangerous chemicals on the plane, including those contained in batteries.

The teams of explosives experts which will soon operate onsite will be augmented by experts from Greece's Atomic Energy Commission, authorities said.

The fire service has cordoned off the area at a radius of about 400 meters.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Jul 17 2022 | 1:16 PM IST

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