An
airplane with several people on-board is nowhere to be found after being
last tracked around the mountainous terrain of Nepal.
A small plane with 21 people on board and flying in poor visibility
over mountainous terrain in Nepal on Wednesday has gone missing and
feared to have crashed.
Domestic airline Tara Air said rescue helicopters had been deployed
to search for the Twin Otter aircraft, which lost contact with air
traffic control eight minutes after it left the western town of Pokhara
on Wednesday morning.
“A plane that took off from Pokhara for Jomsom this morning is out of contact,” Tara Air spokesman Bhim Raj Rai told AFP. “There are 18 passengers, including two foreigners, and three crew members on board.”
One passenger was later confirmed to be from China and another a
Kuwaiti national. All the others were from Nepal and two were children.
“We have dispatched three helicopters on a search and rescue mission. We will provide updates as they come,” the airline said in a statement posted on its website.
“The weather at both origin and destination airports was
favourable and the airport cleared for departure by the control tower at
Pokhara,” said the statement.
A Nepal army spokesman, however, said fog was hampering the search for the Twin Otter plane.
“Our rescue teams have been deployed, but the weather was not clear in the morning,” said army spokesman Tara Bahadur Karki. “They are still out looking at possible areas, but the plane has not been located yet.”
The police chief at Jomsom, Harihari Yogi, said they had reports
from local villagers of hearing a loud explosion near the small village
of Rupshe and attempts were being made to reach it.
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