All sixty-two people on board a Flydubai Boeing 737 were killed when the plane crashed and burst into flames as it was landing in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, yesterday morning, officials said.
The plane was making its second attempt to land in bad weather when it missed the runway, erupting in a huge fireball as it crashed and left debris scattered across a wide area.
“Flydubai regrets to confirm that Flight FZ981 crashed on landing and that fatalities have been confirmed as a result of this tragic accident,” the airline said on Facebook.
Photo: Reuters
Russian investigators confirmed that all 62 people on board were killed, raising the initial toll by one.
“According to initial information, there were 55 passengers and seven crew members on board. They are all dead,” investigators said.
The passengers were all Russian nationals, including four children, local news channel LifeNews reported, describing the crew as unspecified “foreigners.”
Footage shown on local media showed a huge fireball engulfing a wide area after the plane went down. The authorities took more than an hour to get the blaze under control, the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations said.
More than 500 rescuers and 60 vehicles were dispatched to the crash site, the ministry added.
“The plane skimmed the ground and broke into several pieces,” the investigators said, with LifeNews reporting that fragments of the Boeing 737 were scattered up to 1.5km from the crash site.
A strong wind warning was in place and it was raining hard at the time of the crash. LifeNews reported that the plane had been circling the area trying to land for two hours because of the poor weather.
Other flights had been diverted to Krasnodar International Airport, 300km south of Rostov-on-Don.
“The weather conditions were terrible, the plane was shaking terribly,” a passenger on one of the diverted flights told LifeNews.
A criminal investigation into the accident has been launched to determine whether any safety regulations were violated and if negligence played any part in the crash.
Jeanna Terekhova, an adviser to the Russian Ministry of Transport, told news channel Russia 24 that “a possible pilot error” is among the possible causes of the crash being examined.
“We are putting our emergency response in place and we will be working closely with all the authorities involved. We will share as much information as possible just as soon as we can and we will provide updated information on a regular basis,” Emirates-based flydubai said in a statement on its Web site.
“We are aware of reports coming out of Russia and our team is currently gathering more details,” Boeing said on Twitter.
Government-owned Flydubai, a no-frills sister firm to Emirates, was established in March 2008.
Right-wing political scientist Laura Fernandez on Sunday won Costa Rica’s presidential election by a landslide, after promising to crack down on rising violence linked to the cocaine trade. Fernandez’s nearest rival, economist Alvaro Ramos, conceded defeat as results showed the ruling party far exceeding the threshold of 40 percent needed to avoid a runoff. With 94 percent of polling stations counted, the political heir of outgoing Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves had captured 48.3 percent of the vote compared with Ramos’ 33.4 percent, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal said. As soon as the first results were announced, members of Fernandez’s Sovereign People’s Party
EMERGING FIELDS: The Chinese president said that the two countries would explore cooperation in green technology, the digital economy and artificial intelligence Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) yesterday called for an “equal and orderly multipolar world” in the face of “unilateral bullying,” in an apparent jab at the US. Xi was speaking during talks in Beijing with Uruguayan President Yamandu Orsi, the first South American leader to visit China since US special forces captured then-Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro last month — an operation that Beijing condemned as a violation of sovereignty. Orsi follows a slew of leaders to have visited China seeking to boost ties with the world’s second-largest economy to hedge against US President Donald Trump’s increasingly unpredictable administration. “The international situation is fraught
MORE RESPONSIBILITY: Draftees would be expected to fight alongside professional soldiers, likely requiring the transformation of some training brigades into combat units The armed forces are to start incorporating new conscripts into combined arms brigades this year to enhance combat readiness, the Executive Yuan’s latest policy report said. The new policy would affect Taiwanese men entering the military for their compulsory service, which was extended to one year under reforms by then-president Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) in 2022. The conscripts would be trained to operate machine guns, uncrewed aerial vehicles, anti-tank guided missile launchers and Stinger air defense systems, the report said, adding that the basic training would be lengthened to eight weeks. After basic training, conscripts would be sorted into infantry battalions that would take
GROWING AMBITIONS: The scale and tempo of the operations show that the Strait has become the core theater for China to expand its security interests, the report said Chinese military aircraft incursions around Taiwan have surged nearly 15-fold over the past five years, according to a report released yesterday by the Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) Department of China Affairs. Sorties in the Taiwan Strait were previously irregular, totaling 380 in 2020, but have since evolved into routine operations, the report showed. “This demonstrates that the Taiwan Strait has become both the starting point and testing ground for Beijing’s expansionist ambitions,” it said. Driven by military expansionism, China is systematically pursuing actions aimed at altering the regional “status quo,” the department said, adding that Taiwan represents the most critical link in China’s