Live News

IMF to give almost half a billion in aid to Pakistan
03-09-2010

Flood relief efforts still need more cash


03-09-2010

Rescue services on the scene quickly


Three Pakistani cricketers charged by ICC
03-09-2010

High Commissioner says trio are innocent


Vuvuzelas to be allowed at the commonwealth games
03-09-2010

New Delhi says okay for noisy crowds


Refresh page for more video clips

News

Evidence on Pakistani crash site being washed away

Evidence on Pakistani crash site being washed away

29-07-2010

HEAVY  monsoon rains in Islamabad on Thursday (29) hampered recovery efforts at the site of a Pakistani plane crash that killed all 152 people on board a day earlier, a senior police officer said.
 
The Airbus 321, belonging to private airline AirBlue, crashed on Wednesday into a steep and heavily-wooded hillside in Islamabad shortly before it was due to land after a flight from the southern port city of Karachi.
 
Thick fog and rainy weather are considered the most likely reasons for the worst aviation accident on Pakistani soil.
 
Bin Yameen, deputy inspector-general with the Islamabad police, said the operation to recover the remains of victims could not be resumed due to the heavy rain. Difficulty in accessing the site was also complicating salvage efforts.
 
"We are waiting for the rain to stop. In such weather, neither helicopters can fly nor rescue workers move up easily.
 
"We may give it a try but it seems very difficult to carry out such operation in difficult terrain," he said.
 
Investigators were looking into causes of the crash, said senior Civil Aviation Administration officer Ayaz Jadoon.
 
"They're going through records and documents, though they couldn't go up because of bad weather," he said, adding the plane's "black box" data recorder has yet to be recovered.

EVIDENCE WASHING AWAY

The control tower at the airport was sealed off, and radio traffic between the plane and the tower was being examined.
 
The torrential rain may also damage, or wash away, evidence at the site.
 
"Time is very precious," the investigation team's head, Khawaja Abdul Majeed, told Dawn News television after arriving in Islamabad late Wednesday from Karachi.
 
"We have to collect evidence as soon as possible, so we don't have much time."
 
While Wednesday's crash is the worst aviation accident inside Pakistan, the state-owned airline PIA has had worse disasters. In 1979 and 1992, PIA jets crashed in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia and Kathmandu, Nepal, killing 156 and 167 people, respectively.
 
Within Pakistan, the last major aviation accident was in 2006 when a PIA plane crashed near the central city of Multan killing 45 people.
 
The federal information minister said late on Wednesday rescue workers had been able to recover 115 bodies during a day-long operation at the hard-to-access site.
 
Some relatives gathered at the city's main Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital to identify bodies.
 
A hospital official, Tahir Nadeem, said 59 bodies had been identified and taken away by their relatives while the remaining bodies -- mostly in pieces -- have been sent to the morgue.
 
The government declared a day of mourning on Thursday for the victims.
 
"My heart and mind are not ready to believe that he has died. I'm still hoping he might call me anytime," civil engineer Nadeem Ahmed said, as he searched among the bodies at the hospital for his brother. Ahmed did not find his brother's body.
 


Related news

03-10-2008

THE BBC has axed its flagship British-Asian
arts and entertainment programme –


07-10-2008

BOLLYWOOD star Upen Patel is ecstatic that his film Namastey London has been chosen for a European film festival.


07-10-2008

BOLLYWOOD and Hollywood came even closer last week with a nearly £300 million deal.


07-10-2008

A MAN who was convicted of child cruelty for encouraging two boys to beat themselves in a religious ceremony has walked free from court.


07-10-2008

A FAMOUS world peace leader from India is in Britain for the Millennium Development Goal and World Peace Festival 2008, taking place until next Friday (10) in Leicester.


09-10-2008

Faith in police hits new low..


09-10-2008

Indian banks 'safer' than British ones..


09-10-2008

Weight loss 'a matter of survival'



Copyright © 2009 Garavi Gujarat Publications Ltd
Powered by: AMG Infotech