file photo |
An Air Algerie flight yesterday disappeared from radar. The
McDonnell Douglas MD-83 – Flight AH 5017 had been chartered from Spanish
airline Swiftair. It was Algiers bound from Burkina Faso.
Officials however have announced seeing the wreck of the
plane in Mali, there were about 116 people on board including 27 people from
Burkina Faso, 51 French, eight Lebanese, six Algerians, two from Luxembourg,
five Canadians, four Germans, one Cameroonian, one Belgian, one Egyptian, one
Ukrainian, one Swiss, one Nigerian and one Malian.
Air traffic controllers lost contact with the plane early on
Thursday after pilots reported severe storms.
President Francois Hollande expressed solidarity with the
friends and families of those on board.
“A French military unit has been sent to (the area) to
secure the site and gather evidence,” his office said in a statement.
The statement went on to say that the plane had
“disintegrated”, without giving further details.
The crash site was identified on Thursday by the Burkina
Faso army.
“At the moment we have no further information on (the fate
of) the passengers but our teams are hard at work” said Gilbert Diendere, a
Burkina Faso army general.
Gen Diendere said Mali had agreed to their cross-border
search which was launched after a resident in Gossi described seeing a plane go
down to the south-west of the town.
“They found human remains and the wreckage of the plane
totally burnt and scattered,” he told the Associated Press news agency.
Malian state television confirmed that the wreckage was
found in the village of Boulikessi by a helicopter from Burkina Faso.
French fighter jets and UN helicopters had been hunting for
the wreck in the more remote desert region of northern Mali between Gao and
Tessalit.
Contact with Flight AH 5017 was lost about 50 minutes after
take-off from Ouagadougou early on Thursday morning, Air Algerie said.
The pilot had contacted Niger’s control tower in Niamey at
around 01:30 GMT to change course because of a sandstorm, officials say.
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