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Military Plane Crashes in Algeria, Killing at Least 257 Military Plane Crashes in Algeria, Killing at Least 257
(about 1 hour later)
CAIRO — At least 257 people died when an Algerian military transport plane filled with soldiers and civilians crashed near the capital on Wednesday, Algeria’s Defense Ministry said, in the deadliest of numerous air accidents involving aircraft from the country in recent years.CAIRO — At least 257 people died when an Algerian military transport plane filled with soldiers and civilians crashed near the capital on Wednesday, Algeria’s Defense Ministry said, in the deadliest of numerous air accidents involving aircraft from the country in recent years.
The Russian-built Ilyushin Il-76 transporter slammed into a field shortly after takeoff from a military base in Boufarik, about 15 miles southwest of Algiers. The victims included 26 members of Western Sahara’s Polisario independence movement, an official in Algeria’s governing FLN party said. The Russian-built Ilyushin Il-76 transporter slammed into a field shortly after takeoff from a military base in Boufarik, about 15 miles southwest of Algiers. The victims included 26 members of Western Sahara’s Polisario independence movement, an official in Algeria’s governing F.L.N. party said.
Scores of ambulances and emergency workers rushed to the crash site, and video footage showed clouds of smoke billowing from an area near the runway. Scores of ambulances and emergency workers rushed to the crash site, and video footage showed clouds of smoke billowing from an area near the runway. Strong winds fanned a fire that engulfed the wreckage, a security official, Lt. Adel Zghaimi, told state media.
Algerian television showed images of body bags lined up. Farouk Achour, a spokesman for Algeria’s civil protection agency, said that 300 emergency workers were at the scene. Some bodies pulled from the fire showed signs of “deep burns caused by the fuselage catching fire,” he told The Associated Press. Several witnesses told the private network Ennahar TV that they had seen flames coming from one engine as the plane was taking off. It lurched in the sky and crashed on one wing, one witness said.
A Defense Ministry official, speaking by telephone, said at least two people had survived the crash. The cause was unclear and is under investigation, the Defense Ministry said in a statement. Later, rescue workers lined up white body bags near the smoldering wreckage. Farouk Achour, a spokesman for the Algerian civil protection agency, said that 350 emergency workers were at the scene. Some bodies showed signs of “deep burns caused by the fuselage catching fire,” he told The Associated Press.
A Defense Ministry official, speaking by telephone, said at least two people had survived and were being treated in the hospital. The cause of the crash was unclear and under investigation, the Defense Ministry said in a statement, and state media reported that President Abdelaziz Bouteflika had declared three days of mourning.
The plane was headed to Bechar, in the southwest of the country, but was scheduled to stop in Tindouf, an area on Algeria’s border with the disputed territory of Western Sahara. Algeria is a longtime backer of Polisario, the group that has been fighting since 1973 for independence for Western Sahara, which is controlled by Morocco.The plane was headed to Bechar, in the southwest of the country, but was scheduled to stop in Tindouf, an area on Algeria’s border with the disputed territory of Western Sahara. Algeria is a longtime backer of Polisario, the group that has been fighting since 1973 for independence for Western Sahara, which is controlled by Morocco.
The crash came two days after a public appearance by Algeria’s president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, prompted speculation that he intends to run for a fifth term. A wheelchair user since a stroke in 2013, Mr. Bouteflika, 81, is rarely seen in public, raising questions about his ability to rule. The crash came two days after a public appearance by Mr. Bouteflika, the president, that prompted speculation he intended to run for a fifth term. Mr. Bouteflika, 81, came to power in 1999 but has been rarely seen in public since he suffered a stroke in 2013, raising questions about his ability to rule. On Monday, he was filmed in a wheelchair at the opening of a mosque and an extension to the Algiers metro.
Supporters insist he remains strong, even if he needs to speak with a microphone to make himself heard. “Except for his dead voice, he is in good shape and he rules the country,” Lakhdar Brahimi, a retired United Nations diplomat and a friend of Mr. Bouteflika, said in a recent interview. Supporters say he remains strong, even if he needs to speak with a microphone to make himself heard. “Except for his dead voice, he is in good shape and he rules the country,” Lakhdar Brahimi, a retired United Nations diplomat and a friend of Mr. Bouteflika, said in a recent interview.
Africa’s largest country by size, Algeria is rich in natural gas and oil, which account for about 60 percent of national income, and it is one of Europe’s main gas suppliers. Its government is controlled by veterans of the 1954-62 independence war against France; they are notoriously averse to foreign interference and have imposed strong controls that critics say have choked the economy.Africa’s largest country by size, Algeria is rich in natural gas and oil, which account for about 60 percent of national income, and it is one of Europe’s main gas suppliers. Its government is controlled by veterans of the 1954-62 independence war against France; they are notoriously averse to foreign interference and have imposed strong controls that critics say have choked the economy.
An Algerian jihadi, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, was the mastermind of the 2013 seizure of an Algerian gas plant in which 800 people were held hostage and 38 hostages were executed. Mr. Belmokhtar, who has longstanding ties to Al Qaeda, escaped and has been the subject of an intensive manhunt in Libya, where American and French aircraft have repeatedly targeted him in missile strikes. Western intelligence officials are divided over whether he is still alive. An Algerian jihadi, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, was behind the 2013 seizure of an Algerian gas plant in which 800 people were held hostage and 38 executed. Mr. Belmokhtar, who has longstanding ties to Al Qaeda, escaped and has been the subject of an intensive hunt in Libya, where American and French aircraft have repeatedly targeted him in missile strikes. Western intelligence officials are divided over whether he is still alive.
Falling oil prices have fueled unemployment and a strong sense of disillusionment among Algerians under 25, who account for half the country’s 40 million people. Striking teachers and doctors have led long strikes in recent months protesting their pay and conditions. Falling oil prices have driven unemployment and a strong sense of disillusionment among Algerians under 25, who account for half the country’s 40 million people. Teachers and doctors have led long strikes in recent months protesting their pay and conditions, although Reuters reported that some doctors had suspended their walkout to treat the crash victims.
In recent months, falling energy prices have further strained the public finances, leading to a series of monthslong strikes by teachers, doctors and other public workers protesting their pay and conditions. Until Wednesday, the country’s deadliest accident was in July 2014, when an Air Algérie jetliner traveling from Burkina Faso to Algeria crashed in the desert in Mali, killing all 116 people on board, including 54 French citizens. A French investigation into the crash blamed pilot error.
Until Wednesday, the country’s deadliest accident was in July 2014, when an Air Algérie jetliner traveling from Burkina Faso to Algeria crashed in the desert in Mali, killing all 116 people on board, including 53 French citizens. A French investigation into the crash blamed pilot error. In February of that year, an American-built C-130 Hercules transport plane of the Algerian military, carrying 78 personnel and their families crashed into a mountain in the northeastern province of Oum El Bouaghi during bad weather. One person survived.
In February of that year, an Algerian military C-130 Hercules transport plane carrying 78 military personnel and their families crashed into a mountain in the northeastern province of Oum El Bouaghi during bad weather. One person survived.
Six people died when an Algerian Air Force C-130 crashed into a hillside in France in November 2012.Six people died when an Algerian Air Force C-130 crashed into a hillside in France in November 2012.