Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Lukla Plane Crash


Susan sent me a text message saying there had been a plane crash at the Lukla airport and asked me to email Ang Pemba back in Namche that they were okay. It was just coincidence that Susan and Rebecca happened to be staying at Lukla yesterday after trekking down from Namche the day before. They are on their way south into the Solu Khumbu, following the trail that was originally used by all the mountaineers before Sir Edmund Hillary built the airport at Lukla in the late Sixties. It was not part of the plan for Susan or Rebecca to fly out of Lukla, and the crash occurred to an arriving flight, but I'm glad to know they are not involved and I'm sure our friends in Namche and those reading this blog are too.
Here are the details archived from Reuters:
Small Passenger Plane Crashes In Nepal; 18 Dead
By Gopal Sharma
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - A small private plane crashed in the remote mountains of northeast Nepal on Wednesday, killing at least 18 people, mostly foreigners, airline and airport officials said.
Twelve Germans and two Australians were among the dead. The rest were Nepalis. "There were 19 people on board," said Vinay Shakya, an official of Yeti Airlines, a domestic airline.
A crew member survived and was taken to hospital in the capital Kathmandu by helicopter.
The aircraft, a Twin Otter carrying 16 passengers and three crew, crashed shortly before it was due to land at Lukla, known as the gateway to Mount Everest, about 125 km (80 miles) northeast of Kathmandu.
"According to initial reports we have it crashed before it was to land and caught fire," said Yagya Prasad Gautam, chief of the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN). "The accident was probably caused by a last minute change in the weather."
The remote airport at Lukla was built in the 1960s by mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary to facilitate expeditions to Mount Everest and bring development to the impoverished area where the Sherpa community, known for their climbing skills, live.
Nepal named the airport this year after Hillary and his climbing mate, Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, as a tribute to the pair who climbed Everest first in 1953.
Media reports said rescue workers and locals fought for two hours to put out the fire.
Airport official Pratap Bista told state-run Nepal Television that the Lukla airport was among the most testing in the world.
In 2002, 18 people including 13 Germans, were killed when a small plane crashed in bad weather near Pokhara town in west Nepal. Nine people died in a similar crash in 2006.
About a dozen private airlines operate in Nepal. Many fly to remote areas that have no roads, mostly carrying foreign tourists to the Himalayan foothills, including Mount Everest.
© Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

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