12 Apr 2018

Algeria military plane crash: 257 dead

6:04 am on 12 April 2018

An Algerian military plane has crashed near the capital killing 257 people on board, officials say, making it the second-deadliest crash in the past 15 years.

Rescuers gather around the wreckage of an Algerian army plane which crashed near the Boufarik airbase from where the plane had taken off on April 11, 2018.

Photo: AFP PHOTO / RYAD KRAMDI

The aircraft came down just after taking off from Boufarik military airport, west of Algiers.

An inquiry is under way into the cause of the crash - Algeria's worst-ever air disaster. The government has declared three days of national mourning.

Most of the dead were army personnel and their families, the defence ministry said. Ten crew members also died.

Passengers from Western Sahara, a disputed territory annexed by Morocco after Spain withdrew in 1975, were among the fatalities.

The Polisario Front, which is seeking independence for the territory and is backed by Algeria, says 30 Western Saharans, including women and children, died. A senior member of Algeria's ruling FLN party said those killed included 26 Polisario members.

The plane, an Ilyushin Il-76, was travelling to Bechar and Tindouf in the south-west of the country. The Tindouf region, which borders Western Sahara, is home to refugee camps and serves as a base for the Polisario Front.

Witnesses say they saw a wing catch fire as the plane took off. It then went down, avoiding a highway and crashing into a field.

Dozens of firefighters and rescuers worked around the smouldering wreckage. One eyewitness told local television: "We saw bodies burned. It is a real disaster".

There are no reports of survivors. The authorities are working to identify remains of those killed.

Wednesday's plane crash is the deadliest in the world since 17 July 2014, when all 298 people on board Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 died when it was shot down over eastern Ukraine. Pro-Russian rebels are widely accused of shooting the plane down using a surface-to-air missile but they deny responsibility.

The Algeria crash is also the second-deadliest plane crash since 2003. In February that year an Iranian military transport aircraft carrying 276 people crashed in the south of the country, killing all on board.

Four years ago, another plane carrying military personnel and family members crashed in Algeria, killing 77 people.

- BBC