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Many dead in Madrid plane crash

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A convoy of hearses removed bodies from the scene of the crash

 

Accident investigators are to scour the wreckage of a plane that crashed at Madrid's Barajas airport, leaving 153 passengers dead.

 

They will also start to analyse the flight data and voice recorders, which have both been recovered.

 

Three days of official mourning have been declared in Madrid, as relatives arrive at a makeshift mortuary in the capital to identify bodies.

 

Nineteen people survived the crash - some remain in a critical condition.

 

Spanair flight JK 5022, bound for Las Palmas in the Canary Islands, took off on Wednesday lunchtime with 172 people on board.

 

Initial reports suggested that a fire had broken out in one of the MD82 plane's engines during or shortly after take-off from Terminal Four, and the plane ended up in a field.

 

Spanish Transport Minister Magdalena Alvarez said the plane had earlier begun taxiing to the runway, before turning back because of a technical problem, which had caused an hour's delay in the take-off.

 

Spanish media said the pilot had reported a fault with a temperature gauge, but it was thought to have been fixed.

 

Anger

 

A long convoy of black hearses rolled out of the airport grounds during the night to carry bodies to a makeshift morgue, where the victims' relatives, some of whom had travelled from the Canary Islands, gathered.

 

The convention centre on the outskirts of the capital was also used as a mortuary after the Madrid train bombings four years ago.

 

The BBC's Steve Kingstone in Madrid says many of the relatives have expressed anger and disgust at Spanair, blaming it for the accident.

 

He says the injured include a young brother and sister, who immediately asked rescuer workers about their parents.

 

More than 20 of the people on the plane were reported to be children and babies.

 

Spanish ministers said foul play had been ruled out and the crash was considered to be an accident.

 

The 15-year-old plane had passed a safety inspection in January, said Sergio Allard, a spokesman for Spanair, which is owned by Scandinavian firm SAS.

 

Spanish media said some German, Swedish, Chilean and Colombian nationals had been among the passengers.

 

'All destruction'

 

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero cut short his holiday in the south of the country to visit the scene of the crash.

 

Speaking at the airport, he said that "the government is overwhelmed, very affected, as are all Spanish citizens, by this tragedy".

 

Television images on Wednesday showed plumes of smoke rising over the field in which the remains of the plane were resting.

 

Emergency services chief Ervigio Corral said that rescue workers had been faced with "a desolate scene".

 

"You couldn't distinguish that there was an aircraft there apart from the remains of the tail," he said. "There was nothing of fuselage."

 

Another rescue worker, Pablo Albella, told AP news agency: "The fuselage is destroyed. The plane burned. I have seen a kilometre of charred land and few whole pieces of the fuselage. It is all destruction."

 

Messages of sympathy have been sent to Spain by leaders around the world.

 

The presidents of Russia, France and Italy, Germany's chancellor and Britain's queen joined with Latin American leaders in sending their condolences.

 

It was the deadliest air accident in Spain since a Colombian airline's Boeing 747 crashed in Madrid in 1983 killing 181 people.

 

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7573674.stm

i saw this on the news this morning.

 

at first i couldn't really comprehend it. it's so sad. :cry:.

 

my heart goes out to their friends and families.

Its all very sad here at the moment because of the accident, there are three days of national morning..and flags are being flew in all official places at half mast. El rey de españa (sorry the king of Spain. Has gone to see the families of the victims today, I seen him on the news he looks grief stricken, and Jose luis Rodregirez Zapertero (spanish PM ) has gone to see the survivors.

 

The whole country is united in grief ..

Damn.This is horrible.I heard about t yesterday and the death toll kept going up.

R.I.P.

 

I heard about it on the radio when it happened, and they were saying that only a couple people died with the remaining injuries.

 

But R.I.P. to the fallen :(

I was very shocked after watching breaking news yesterday. I used Spanair two times for flights to Mallorca and Gran Canaria years before. 4 people from Bavaria are victims, too. The family was particularly popular in their hometown. :(

very sad :(

 

i still can't believe it, i remember the moment when i knew it. :( and how news were worse each hour. :(

 

very sad.

Dios Mio!

 

So bad! and So Sad!

:cry:

  • 3 weeks later...

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