Mourning relatives watched from a debris-littered shore as divers retrieved bodies from a jet that crashed off the West African nation of Benin with 161 people on board.
More than 20 people, including the pilot, survived the Christmas Day crash. Dozens of others were still missing and feared dead, officials said Friday.
"I can't bear to think what has become of them," said Karim Jumblat, a Lebanese man waiting for news of three brothers who were heading home to spend the holidays with their parents.
PHOTO: AFP
"If only they had waited a few days more," Jumblat, who was to follow his brothers a few days later, said before turning to wipe away tears.
Another man fainted as authorities brought his wife's body to shore Friday. A day earlier, they recovered his 3-year-old daughter. Like many other Lebanese who work in West Africa, they had been heading home to spend Christmas with relatives.
The Boeing 727, carrying mostly Lebanese, clipped a building at the end of the runway and plunged into the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday, scattering bodies and debris along the beach and into the sea.
Lebanese Foreign Minister Jean Obeid, who flew to Cotonou on Friday, said 113 bodies had been recovered.
There were 22 survivors, he said, including the pilot. Some who initially survived the crash later succumbed to their wounds.
Obeid said 151 passengers and 10 crew members were aboard the Union des Transports Africains plane, which was owned by Lebanese businessmen and registered in Guinea.
The flight originated in the Guinean capital, Conakry, and stopped in Freetown, Sierra Leone, picking up Lebanese along the way. Thousands of Lebanese work in West Africa.
One survivor, Hamza Hamoud, said he was traveling home to Lebanon with nine friends.
"During takeoff we were laughing, playing around," the 28-year-old businessman told reporters, pacing a Cotonou hospital with bandaged arms. "I felt the plane hit something and suddenly we were in the water."
Hamoud swam to safety, then helped fishermen save others.
"All my friends are dead. All nine of them," he said.
The plane broke apart on impact, hurtling a severed cockpit onto the beach. The body of the destroyed aircraft lay partially submerged in the water; an engine lay in the surf.
Thousands of onlookers thronged the accident scene. A few looters rifled through debris, shredded clothes and ripped luggage, pocketing cell phones and cash. One man hauled away a small piece of the shattered plane, apparently as a souvenir.
It was not known what caused the crash.
Benin's chief of army staff, Fernand Amoussou, said earlier Friday that one of the plane's two black boxes had been found. But Benin Foreign Affairs Minister Rogatien Biaou later said that report was wrong.
The French Defense Ministry said in a statement from Paris that it was dispatching navy divers to aid the recovery and investigation at the request of Benin's government. France also agreed to send a military transport plane to Cotonou to help repatriate bodies.
The retrieval of bodies was delayed because Benin lacked the equipment to lift the wreckage from the sea, Obeid said.
An American scientist convicted of lying to US authorities about payments from China while he was at Harvard University has rebuilt his research lab in Shenzhen, China, to pursue technology the Chinese government has identified as a national priority: embedding electronics into the human brain. Charles Lieber, 67, is among the world’s leading researchers in brain-computer interfaces. The technology has shown promise in treating conditions such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and restoring movement in paralyzed people. It also has potential military applications: Scientists at the Chinese People’s Liberation Army have investigated brain interfaces as a way to engineer super soldiers by boosting
Indonesian police have arrested 13 people after shocking images of alleged abuse against small children at a daycare center went viral, sparking outrage across the nation, officials said on Monday. Police on Friday last week raided Little Aresha, a daycare center in Yogyakarta on Java island, following a report from a former employee. CCTV footage circulating on social media showed children, most younger than two, lying on the floor wearing only diapers, their hands and feet bound with rags. The police have confirmed that the footage is authentic. Police said they also found 20 children crammed into a room just 3m by 3m. “So
A grieving mother has ended her life at a clinic in Switzerland four years after the death of her only child. Wendy Duffy, 56, a physically healthy woman, died at the Pegasos clinic in Basel after struggling to cope with the death of her 23-year-old son, Marcus. The former care worker, from the West Midlands, England, had previously attempted to take her own life. The case comes as assisted dying would not become law in England and Wales after proposed legislation, branded “hopelessly flawed” by opponents, ran out of time. Ruedi Habegger, the founder of Pegasos, described Duffy’s death as
From post offices and parks to stations and even the summit of Mount Fuji, Japan’s vending machines are ubiquitous, but with the rapid pace of inflation cooling demand for their drinks, operators are being forced to rethink the business. Last month beverage giant DyDo Group Holdings announced it would remove about 20,000 vending machines — about 7 percent of their stock nationwide — by January next year, to “reconstruct a profitable network.” Pokka Sapporo Food & Beverage, based in Nagoya, also said last month it would sell its 40,000-machine operation to Osaka-based Lifedrink Co. “The strength of the vending machine