Six crew members, including two Burmese, died when a plane they were testing crashed in central Russia on Saturday, the Russian emergency ministry said.
The six died when the AN-148 plane crashed and burst into flames on Saturday morning about 160km east of the city of Belgorod, the ministry said in a statement, citing preliminary data.
The dead included two citizens of Myanmar, along with two pilots and two flight engineers, who were Russian citizens, the regional emergency ministry said.
The Burmese were identified as pilots Htein Lin Aung and Zaw Htun Aung.
Russia’s state aircraft holding, the United Aircraft Corp, said the plane was intended for Myanmar, fulfilling a contract signed last year between the holding and the Myanmar government.
The pilots from Myanmar were undergoing flight training in a plane that had been tested by the factory, it said in a statement.
The plane disappeared from the radar at 10:40am and a plane flying over the area later spotted a fire where it crashed, the source said. Russian television showed flames ripping through the wreckage and black smoke billowing from the crash site in a snowy field close to wooden houses and trees.
A witness cited by the Interfax news agency said the plane appeared to burst into flames before hitting the ground.
“I saw the plane starting to circle over the school, then it burst into flames and fell on the vegetable gardens of the villagers,” the agency cited a witness living in the village of Garbuzovo.
The Russian Investigative Committee said in a statement that it had opened a criminal investigation into breaches of flight safety rules.
A source told Interfax the Burmese had not trained to fly the plane on flight simulators.
“If they were at the controls, it could have led to the air crash. The plane could have fallen into a spin,” the source said.
The AN-148, designed by Ukraine’s Antonov factory and built by Voronezh aircraft factory in a joint project, is a jet liner with a regional range that can be used for passengers and cargo.
Western governments have imposed sanctions on investment and travel over human rights abuses in military-ruled Myanmar.
Last month, EU lawmakers urged China, India and Russia to pressure Myanmar to improve human rights and to stop supplying arms to the regime.
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