Tuesday 30 June 2015

C-130 Indonesia Military plane crashes in residential area


MEDAN: At least 45 people were killed when an Indonesian air force transport plane crashed Tuesday into a major city shortly after take-off and exploded in a fireball.

Officials warned the death toll could rise after the Hercules C-130 came down in a residential area of Medan, a city of two million on the island of Sumatra, leaving buildings severely damaged and cars reduced to flaming wrecks.

A rescue operation swung into action, with ambulances ferrying bodies from the accident site, and crowds of anxious residents gathering around a police cordon to have a look at the smouldering wreckage of the plane.

Novi, an employee of an international school near the accident site who goes by one name, said she heard the aircraft and from her office window saw it flying very low before it crashed.

An Indonesian air force transport plane crashed Tuesday shortly after take-off, exploding in a fireball in a city residential area and killing at least 20 people.


"It was very scary," she told AFP, adding she rushed to the site with her colleagues but the wreckage and plumes of smoke looked "very bad".

Another local resident Januar, 26, said the plane appeared to be in trouble just before the accident.

"I saw the plane from the direction of the airport and it was tilting already, then I saw smoke billowing."

A hospital in Medan said 20 bodies had so far been brought in.

"Twenty bodies have arrived at the hospital's morgue," Sairi Saragih, spokeswoman for the Adam Malik hospital, told AFP.



Poor air safety record


There were 12 crew on board the plane, which had been transporting military supplies to airbases. Local media reported they consisted of three pilots, one navigator and eight technicians.

The crash was in a newly built residential area and officials said it was unclear whether anyone was in the buildings at the time of the accident.

"The bodies have been crushed by debris of the buildings and the fuselage," said local police chief Mardiaz Dwihananto, adding they were being ferried one by one to hospital.

Military spokesman Fuad Basya said the plane took off at 12:08 pm (0508 GMT) from an air force base and crashed in the city about two minutes later, about five kilometres (three miles) from the base.

Search and rescue agency official Tatang Zainuddin said teams in the area had been quickly called up to recover victims.

The Indonesian air force has suffered accidents before.

In April an F-16 fighter jet caught fire as it was about to take off from an airbase in Jakarta, prompting the pilot to jump to safety as flames and thick smoke engulfed the plane.

The pilot escaped with minor injuries from the jet, which had been due to provide security at a summit of Asian and African leaders in Indonesia.

In March two air force planes from an Indonesian aerobatics team crashed during a practice session before an air show on Malaysia's Langkawi island. All four pilots ejected successfully and survived.

Indonesia also has a poor civil aviation safety record. An Indonesia AirAsia plane crashed in December en route from Indonesia's Surabaya to Singapore, killing all 162 people on board.

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If you're avoiding air travel after MH17 and more, let statistics be your guide | James Ball

Suddenly fear flying? There are so many better things to be scared of. Photograph: Stephen Strathdee/Getty Images

Is it really so irrational to avoid air travel in the wake of the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine, and the TransAsia crash off the coast of Taiwan, and now the Algerian airliner in Northern Africa?

Yes. Completely, totally and entirely irrational. You are probably not going to die in an airplane crash.

It's a widespread fear after planes go down, even though the truth is that air travel is almost always boringly safe and uneventful (whether we concentrate on major US airlines or other carriers around the world). The latest global airline safety report shows there were 90 commercial airplane accidents in 2013. Only nine involved fatalities

Fred returns to Shakhtar Donetsk having stayed away after MH17 disaster

A poster in Donetsk featuring Shakhtar players. Six of the squad refused to return to Ukraine after the MH17 disaster. Photograph: Robert Ghement/EPA

The Brazilian midfielder Fred has arrived back in Ukraine for training with Shakhtar Donetsk, having initially refused to travel in the wake of the MH17 disaster.

Fred was one of six South Americans who refused to return to the club after the Malaysian Airlines plane was shot down over eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 people on board.

His fellow Brazilians Ismaily, Douglas Costa, Alex Teixeira and Dentinho, and the Argentinian striker Facundo Ferreyra, also refused to travel from France following a friendly against Lyon.

The club, which announced on Wednesday it would move its headquarters to Kiev and play Champions League and domestic games in the western city of Lviv, said in a statement:

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