Nepalese rescue
workers and civilians gather at the wreckage of a Beechcraft 1900D operated by
Buddha Air after it crashed in the mountains outside Bisankunarayan village,
just south of Katmandu, Nepal, early Sunday, Sept. 25, 2011. (Niranjan
Shrestha/AP Photo)
Associated Press KATMANDU, Nepal
September 25, 2011 (AP)
Nepalese rescue
workers and civilians gather at the wreckage of a Beechcraft 1900D operated by
Buddha Air after it crashed in the mountains outside Bisankunarayan village,
just south of Katmandu, Nepal, early Sunday, Sept. 25, 2011. (Niranjan
Shrestha/AP Photo)
A plane carrying
tourists to view Mount Everest crashed while attempting to land in Nepal on
Sunday, killing all 19 people on board, including 13 foreigners, officials
said.
Ten Indians, two
Americans and one Japanese were among the victims, Tourism Secretary Ganeshraj
Joshi said.
The turboprop plane
belonging to Buddha Air was also carrying three Nepalese passengers and three
crew members when it crashed in Bisankunarayan village, just a few miles
(kilometers) south of the capital, Katmandu.
A witness, Haribol
Poudel, told Avenues Television that the plane hit the roof of a house in the
village and broke into several pieces. No casualties were reported on the
ground.
Poudel said it was
foggy and visibility was very low in the mountainous area.
Rewant Kuwar, an
official at Katmandu's international airport rescue office, said 18 bodies were
pulled out of the plane's wreckage, and another victim died after being rushed
to a hospital.
The two Americans
were identified as Andrew Wade and Natalie Neilan, while the Japanese citizen
was Toshinori Uejima. Their hometowns and other details were not immediately
known.
The Beechcraft 1900D
plane — manufactured by Raytheon Aircraft, now known as Hawker Beechcraft — had
taken the passengers to view Mount Everest and other peaks on a one-hour
"mountain flight" and was returning to Katmandu.
The government
ordered an investigation into the crash.
The weather on
Sunday morning was foggy and the visibility was poor around Katmandu, according
to meteorologist Rajendra Shrestha. The surrounding mountains were enveloped in
fog and it was raining at the time of the crash.
The bodies were
flown by army helicopter to Katmandu airport and transported to the Tribhuwan
University Teaching Hospital for post-mortems.
Relatives of the
Nepalese victims waited outside the hospital to claim the bodies, but were told
by police that they would only be able to do so on Monday. Most Nepalese
believe that people have to be cremated within a day of their deaths.
Officials from the
Indian and U.S. embassies visited the hospital but did not speak to media.
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