Comoros Islands
News Africa Aircraft debris spotted off Comoros The Yemenia airlines A310 was carrying 153 people when it crashed in the seas off the Comoros [AFP]Debris and bodies have been spotted off the Comoros
islands in the Indian ocean where an Airbus A310-300 belonging to Yemen's national carrier is believed to have crashed, a regional air security body has said.Officials said the plane belonging to
Yemenia airlines went down in stormy weather as it tried to land in the Comoros capital, Moroni, in the early hours of Tuesday.
An official at the airport, who declined to be named, said the control tower had lost contact with the plane shortly after receiving notification that it was coming in to land.There was�no word on
the fate of the 142 passengers, including three infants, and 11 crew on board, although one report said one person from the plane had been found alive.Details of the crash remain sketchy but
officials from Yemenia said some bodies had been recovered from the site.The plane carrying mostly French and Comoran nationals was flying from the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, to Moroni on the main
Comoros�island of Grande Comore.
Ibrahim Kassim, an official with the regional air security body Asecna, said search and rescue planes had spotted debris at the supposed crash site.He said the plane had probably come down 5-10km
from the coast and believed that it crashed along its landing approach."The weather is really not very favourable.
The sea is very rough," Kassim told Reuters.Asecna, or the Agency for Aviation Security and Navigation in Africa and Madagascar, covers Francophone Africa.Search teamsMoroni airport authorities said
civilian and military rescue teams were immediately deployed to search for the plane in the rough waters."Two French military aircraft have left from the islands of Mayotte and Reunion to search the
identified zone, and a French vessel has left Mayotte," Hadji Madi Ali, the director-general of the airport, said.The�aircraft�came down in stormy weather as it tried to land early on Tuesday [AFP]
Mohammad al-Sumairi, deputy general manager for Yemenia operations, told Reuters that they did not know the cause of the crash or have any information on survivors."The weather conditions were rough,
strong wind and high seas.
The wind speed recorded on land at the airport was 61km an hour," he said, adding there could be "other factors".Comoros officials said the plane could have crashed in the area of Mitsamiouli, a town
on the main island.Hamid Bourhane, the interior minister, told Reuters the army had sent small speedboats to the suspected crash site."At the moment we don't have any information about whether there
are any survivors," he added.The Comoros covers three small volcanic islands, Grande Comore, Anjouan and Moheli, in the Mozambique channel about 300km northwest of Madagascar and about the same
distance east of the African mainland.This is the second Airbus to plunge into the sea this month, after an Air France Airbus A330-200 crashed into the Atlantic Ocean killing 228 people on board on
June 1.In 1996, a hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 also crashed into the sea off the Comoros islands in 1996, killing 125 of 175 passengers and crew.
�Source: Agencies
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2009/06/200963054644597885.html





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