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Tuesday, 30 June 2015
At least 38 dead after military plane crashes in Indonesian city
At least 38 people have been killed after an Indonesian military plane crashed Tuesday in a residential neighborhood of Medan city in North Sumatra, a police official said, according to the Associated Press.
The pilot of the Hercules C-130 told the air control tower that the plane needed to turn back because of engine trouble, Air Marshall Agus Supriatna reportedly said.
"The plane crashed while it was turning right to return to the airport," Supriatna said, adding that there were 17 military personnel on board the plane.
Twelve crew members were on board the plane, air force operations commander Agus Dwi Putranto said on local television, according to the Associated Press (AP), adding that the total number of passengers on board was unknown. Authorities reportedly said that a rescue operation is underway.
A local hospital spokeswoman Sairi M. Saragih said that the hospital had received five bodies so far, according to AP.
Television footage showed the wreckage of the downed C-130 Hercules, a crumpled burning car and a shattered building that local media said contained a spa. Smoke billowed from the site and several thousand people milled nearby.
North Sumatra police chief Eko Hadi Sutedjo told reporters that the plane was carrying 50 people based on its manifest.
He said 37 bodies have been transported to Medan's Adam Malik hospital and include a child who was probably about a year old.
None of the bodies has been identified and it's unclear how many of the victims are military personnel and how many are civilians, Sutedjo said.
The crash of the transport plane occurred just two minutes after it took off from Soewondo air force base.
Air force chief Air Marshall Agus Supriatna said the pilot told the control tower that the plane needed to turn back because of engine trouble.
"The plane crashed while it was turning right to return to the airport," Supriatna said.
Medan resident Fahmi Sembiring said he saw the gray Hercules flying very low as he was driving.
"Flames and black smoke were coming from the plane in the air," he said. Sembiring said he stopped not far from the crash site and saw several people rescued by police, security guards and bystanders.
Indonesia has a patchy aviation safety record. Between 2007 and 2009, the European Union barred Indonesian airlines from flying to Europe because of safety concerns. The country's most recent civilian airline disaster was in December, when an AirAsia jet with 162 people on board crashed into the Java Sea en route from Surabaya to Singapore.
The C-130 accident is the second time in 10 years that an airplane has crashed into a Medan neighborhood. In September 2005, a Mandala Airlines Boeing 737 crashed into a crowded residential community shortly after takeoff from Medan's Polonia airport, killing 143 people including 30 on the ground.
Medan, with about 3.4 million people, is the third most populous city in Indonesia after the capital, Jakarta, and Surabaya.
Tuesday 30 June 2015
http://www.ibtimes.com/indonesia-military-plane-crash-least-37-killed-after-hercules-c-130-crashes-medan-1989355
http://www.roanoke.com/news/world/wire/indonesia-military-transport-plane-crashes-in-medan-dead/article_d1279cd1-1dd0-5e41-b452-5b33c043416b.html
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