76 Die In Brazilian Football Team Plane Crash

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Rescuers search the wreckage of the charter plane Tuesday in mountains outside Medellin, Columbia.

A chartered passengers’ plane with a Brazilian first division football team crashed near Medellin, Colombia, yesterday morning, killing 76 persons out of 81 on board.

The ill-fated plane was carrying players, officials, supporters and journalists to the finals of a regional tournament in Colombia when it crashed few minutes to landing. Only five people survived.

The head of Colombia’s aviation authority, Alfredo Bocanegra, said initial reports suggested the aircraft was suffering electrical problems although investigators were also looking into an account from one of the survivors that the plane had run out of fuel about five minutes from its expected landing at Jose Maria Cordova airport outside Medellin. A full investigation ‎may take weeks, if not months.

The British Aerospace 146 short-haul plane, operated by a charter airline named LaMia, declared an emergency and lost radar contact just before 10:00 p.m. Monday (0300 GMT or 4:00 a.m. yesterday in Nigeria) because of an electrical failure, aviation authorities said.

The aircraft, which had departed from Santa Cruz, Bolivia, was transporting the Chapecoense team from southern Brazil for the first leg of a two-game Copa Sudamericana final against Atletico Nacional of Medellin.

“What was supposed to be a celebration has turned into a tragedy,” Medellin Mayor Federico Gutierrez said from the search and rescue command centre.

Brazil’s President Michel Temer has decreed three days of national mourning for the victims.

The club said in a brief statement on its Facebook page that “may God accompany our athletes, officials, journalists and other guests travelling with our delegation.”

South America’s football federation extended its condolences to the entire Chapecoense community and said its president, Alejandro Dominguez, was on his way to Medellin. All soccer activities were suspended until further notice, the organisation said in a statement.

Dozens of rescuers working through the night were initially heartened after pulling three passengers alive from the wreckage.

But as the hours passed, and heavy rainfall and low visibility grounded helicopters and complicated efforts to reach the mountainside crash site, the mood soured to the point that authorities had to freeze until dusk what was by then a body recovery operation.

Images broadcast on local television showed three passengers arriving to a local hospital in ambulances on stretchers and covered in blankets connected to an IV.

Among the survivors was a Chapecoense defender named Alan Ruschel, who doctors said suffered spinal injuries. Two goalkeepers, Danilo and Jackson Follmann, as well as a member of the team’s delegation and a Bolivian flight attendant, also survived.

The plane was carrying 72 passengers and nine crew members, aviation authorities said in a statement.

Local radio said the same aircraft transported Argentina’s national squad for a match earlier this month in Brazil, and previously had transported Venezuela’s national team.

British Aerospace, which is now known as BAE Systems, says that the first 146-model plane took off in 1981 and that just under 400 – including the successor Avro RJ – were built in total in the United Kingdom through 2003. It says around 220 are still in service in a variety of roles, including aerial firefighting and overnight freight services.

A video published on the team’s Facebook page showed the team readying for the flight earlier on Monday in Sao Paulo’s Guarulhos international airport. It wasn’t immediately clear if the team switched planes in Bolivia or just made a stopover with the same plane.

The team, from the small city of Chapeco, was in the middle of a fairy tale season. It joined Brazil’s first division in 2014 for the first time since the 1970s and made it last week to the Copa Sudamericana finals – the equivalent of the UEFA Europa League tournament – after defeating two of Argentina’s fiercest squads, San Lorenzo and Independiente, as well as Colombia’s Junior.

“This morning I said goodbye to them and they told me they were going after the dream, turning that dream into reality,” Chapecoense board member told TV Globo. “The dream was over early this morning.”

The team is so modest that its 22,000-seat arena was ruled by tournament organisers too small to host the final match, which was instead moved to a stadium 300 miles (480 kilometres) to the north in the city of Curitiba.

“This is unbelievable, I am walking on the grass of the stadium and I feel like I am floating,” Andrei Copetti, a team spokesman, told The Associated Press. “No one understands how a story that was so amazing could suffer such a devastating reversal. For many people here reality has still not struck.”

Source: Guardian

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