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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Plane crash kills 127

Pakistani jet trying to land during storm

Saeed Shah McClatchy

KARACHI, Pakistan – An airliner on a domestic flight crashed Friday near the Pakistani capital of Islamabad with 127 people on board after trying to land in stormy weather, officials and news reports said.

No survivors were found, officials and rescuers reported. Bodies and parts of the plane lay scattered over a wide area, in fields and a village, some three to four miles from the Islamabad airport, where the aircraft had been due to land around 6:40 p.m. local time. The flight had taken off from Karachi, Pakistan’s primary port, just after 5 p.m.

There was heavy rain, lightning and low clouds in the Islamabad area as the plane, an aged Boeing 737-200 flown by the local Bhoja Air, a private budget airline, came in to land.

“The weather was very rough. There was thunder and hail,” said Arshad Mehmood, a naval pilot who witnessed the crash and rushed to the scene. “The plane stalled and descended very rapidly. The most likely reason was the weather. The pilot could not control the plane.”

He continued: “We got there within five minutes. There were dead bodies and pieces of bodies everywhere. We could find no survivors.”

Civilian and military rescue teams and residents worked at the scene, recovering bodies. An emergency was declared in hospitals around Islamabad.

Twisted, battered, burned pieces of the plane were scattered over about half a mile. A set of wheels lay in the field, along with one of the plane’s doors. Children’s shoes, identity cards, women’s jewelry and other possessions were strewn over the scene. Villagers said they ran out to look for anyone alive but found only corpses.

There were 118 passengers, including 68 women and six infants, and nine crew members on board. No foreigners were on the flight, said Mansab Bokhari, an airport official in Karachi.

Villagers said they’d seen a lightning flash and then heard a massive explosion, which was followed by a rain of aircraft parts and bodies. Some landed on the roofs and in the courtyards of the villagers’ homes.

Debris from the aircraft was strewn over several miles.

“I was with my family about to eat dinner when there was a flash, a huge bang, and then things started falling,” said Niaz Kayani, a retired soldier. “It was a scene from hell: Bodies were all over the place, in the fields and on the roofs of homes.”