WINDHOEK: Police yesterday found the burned wreckage of a Mozambican Airlines plane the day after it went missing in northeastern Namibia, saying none of the 33 people aboard had survived.
The crash in the remote, swampy terrain of Namibia’s Bwabwata National Park killed victims from several countries and is one of the worst accidents on record in Mozambique’s civil aviation history.
“My team on the ground have found the wreckage. No survivors. The plane is totally burned,” Willie Bampton, a regional police coordinator in Namibia’s Kavango region, said.
The Mozambican government confirmed the crash and said it would declare a period of national mourning for the victims.
“The plane was transporting six crew members, and 27 passengers of whom 10 were Mozambican, nine Angolans, five Portuguese, one French, one Brazilian and one Chinese,” said Mozambican Transport and Communications Minister Gabriel Muthisse.
In Portugal, the foreign ministry said the Brazilian in fact had dual Portuguese-Brazilian nationality. The plane, en route from Mozambique to Angola, went down in the deserted terrain of the Bwabwata park, where Namibia turns into a narrow strip of land sandwiched between Botswana and Angola.
Mozambican authorities confirmed it was a Brazil-manufactured Embraer 190 aircraft and said it was the newest plane in the airline’s fleet.
Embraer issued a statement confirming the crash and extending “its support to investigating authorities, in pursuit of the causes of the accident.”
It said a team of its technicians would go to the scene. The European Union banned the airline, known in Portuguese as Linhas Aereas de Mocambique (LAM), and all air carriers certified in Mozambique from flying in its airspace in 2011, citing “significant safety deficiencies”.
The concern was about Mozambique’s civil aviation authority, rather than the track record of the various airlines.
The flight, MT 470, flight took off from Maputo at 0926 GMT on Friday for the nearly four-hour flight to the Angolan capital Luanda. With 100 seats, it was two-thirds empty. Last contact with air traffic controllers was made at 1130 GMT over north Namibia during heavy rainfall.
Namibian police sent a search team to the area after Botswanan officials alerted them of a plane crash. “Botswana officials informed us that they saw smoke in the air and they thought the crash happened in their country, but when they came to the border they realised that it was in Namibia,” said the Namibian regional police coordinator.
The search for the plane was hampered both by the rough terrain and torrential rains pounding the area, he said. “There are no proper roads, you have to go through the bush slowly and it’s making our job difficult,” he said.
Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva published a condolence message to victims’ families.
AFP