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Seventeen die in DR Congo crash DR Congo plane crash 'kills many'
(about 3 hours later)
A plane has crashed into a busy market area in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, killing at least 17 people, officials say. Many people are feared dead in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo after a plane crashed into a residential area soon after take-off.
The Antonov 26 cargo plane owned by the Congolese airline, Africa 1, ploughed through several houses in the Kingasani residential area near Ndjili airport. The plane landed in Kingsani, a crowded market district of Kinshasa, sending a fireball and thick smoke into the air.
A UN spokesman said several more people had been on board the plane and that there were other victims on the ground. A UN official in Congo told the BBC that 25 of the 27 people on board were killed, and that there were more victims on the ground.
Air accidents are frequent in DR Congo, where many airlines fly ageing planes.Air accidents are frequent in DR Congo, where many airlines fly ageing planes.
According to the African Airlines Association, the country has accounted for well over half of all the air crashes in Africa over the last decade. One out of every five fatal air accidents happens in Africa.According to the African Airlines Association, the country has accounted for well over half of all the air crashes in Africa over the last decade. One out of every five fatal air accidents happens in Africa.
'Many dead' Hundreds gather at site
The twin-propeller aircraft carrying at least 17 people had been en route to Tshikapa, a town in the south of the country, when it crashed, an airport official told the Associated Press. The Antonov 26 cargo plane, owned by the Congolese airline Africa 1, crashed shortly after take-off from nearby Ndjili airport. It was bound for Tshikapa, in the central province of Kasai-Occidental.
It came down around 1030 (0930 GMT) about 5km (three miles) from Ndjili international airport in the Kingasani market, Appo Ilunga said. It's an African city with a densely populated area there - almost a shantytown, if you wish - so we're afraid the damage might be great Michel BonnardeauxUnited Nations spokesman in DRC
Papy Kangufu, a local resident, said the area had been full of people when the plane ploughed into it and sent a fireball into the air. Papy Kangufu, a local resident, said the area had been full of people when the plane ploughed into it, sending a fireball into the air.
Several houses were destroyed or set alight in the crash and smoke filled the sky. Several homes were destroyed in the crash, which happened at about 1030 (0930 GMT). One wing is the largest part of the aeroplane which remains.
The BBC's Emery Agalu Makumeno at the crash site says firefighters are still battling to put out the fire from the fuselage. The BBC's Emery Agalu Makumeno at the crash site said firefighters were battling to put out the fire from the fuselage, and hundreds of local people were at the scene.
Rescuers are taking injured people to a nearby hospital and hundreds of local residents have crowded round the site to assist them. Residents were trying to help the rescue teams retrieve remains from the aircraft, and paramedics and Red Cross workers were trying to get injured people to hospital.
It is difficult to get casualty figures on the ground, but a local police commander, Alexis Dekikobo, has said he saw the bodies of four adults and baby amid the wreckage. There is confusion about the death toll. The state aviation safety body RVA (Regie Voies Aeriennes) has confirmed 19 deaths.
A spokesman for the UN mission in DR Congo (Monuc), Michel Bonnardeaux, told the AFP news agency that 27 people had been on board the plane and that two members of the crew, a mechanic and an air hostess, had survived. But a United Nations spokesman in DRC, Michel Bonnardeaux, told the BBC he had heard from local police sources that there were 27 people on board, and that two had survived - an air hostess and a mechanic.
The Russian embassy in Kinshasa told the ITAR-Tass news agency that the Antonov's crew had been Russian. "What we don't have is how many people were injured or dead on the ground. It's an African city with a densely populated area there - almost a shantytown, if you wish - so we're afraid the damage might be great," he said.
A month ago DR Congo's minister for transport banned all Antonovs from flying over Congolese territory, our correspondent says. But the ban was lifted a week ago as it was so unpopular.
EU banEU ban
At least 20 private companies in DR Congo operate mainly old planes built in the former Soviet Union.At least 20 private companies in DR Congo operate mainly old planes built in the former Soviet Union.
Last year, the European Union banned all but one of the country's air companies, including Africa 1, from operating in Europe.Last year, the European Union banned all but one of the country's air companies, including Africa 1, from operating in Europe.
The International Air Transport Association also included DR Congo in a group of several African countries it classed as an "embarrassment" to the industry.The International Air Transport Association also included DR Congo in a group of several African countries it classed as an "embarrassment" to the industry.
In 1996, more than 300 people were killed when an Antonov 32 aircraft ploughed into a busy market soon after taking off from an airport in Kinshasa.In 1996, more than 300 people were killed when an Antonov 32 aircraft ploughed into a busy market soon after taking off from an airport in Kinshasa.
Aircraft are used extensively for transport in DR Congo, a huge country where there are few paved roads.Aircraft are used extensively for transport in DR Congo, a huge country where there are few paved roads.