World

Nineteen dead after passenger plane crashes into Lake Victoria as it was landing at airport

Nineteen people have died after a small passenger plane crashed into Lake Victoria as it was coming in to land at an airport in Tanzania.

Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa announced the new death toll, which is up from three earlier.

The aircraft was travelling to Bukoba airport when the accident happened.

Previously authorities said 26 of the 43 people on board the Precision Air flight from the country’s biggest city, Dar es Salaam, had been rescued and taken to hospital.

“We have managed to save quite a number of people,” Kagera province police commander William Mwampaghale told journalists.

“When the aircraft was about 100 metres (328ft) midair, it encountered problems and bad weather. It was raining and the plane plunged into the water. Everything is under control,” he said.

The plane “fell in Lake Victoria this morning due to storms and heavy rains”, according to the Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation.

More on Tanzania

Video footage and images that circulated on social media showed the plane almost fully submerged, with only its green and brown-coloured tail visible above the water line of Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest lake.

A child was among the 39 passengers on board the flight, the airline said.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan expressed her condolences to all those affected by the incident and called for calm while the rescue operation continues.

Chief administrator of Tanzania’s Kagera region, Albert Chalamila, said that rescuers were in contact with the pilots while they were still in the cockpit.

Articles You May Like

10 ways Velotric’s electric bikes are built differently: Deep-dive on the Discover 2
Oil prices little changed as U.S. moves to replenish reserve, Gaza cease-fire still uncertain
Failed SONDORS Metacycle motorcycle was never street legal, reveals employee
BP misses expectations as profits slip on weaker oil and gas prices
Siemens Energy shares jump 13% after guidance raise and leadership change at embattled wind turbine unit