April 26, 2024

Brighton Journal

Complete News World

Nepalese Tara Air plane lost with 22 people on board

Nepalese Tara Air plane lost with 22 people on board

The plane was on its way from Pokhara to Jomsom, a popular tourist town in central Nepal. The Nepal Civil Aviation Authority said the plane took off at 9:55 am local time and lost contact with air control about 12 minutes into the flight. Journeys between the two cities usually take 20-25 minutes.

Authorities believe the cause of the accident was bad weather, according to Binod PK, an official at the Nepali Ministry of Home Affairs.

The ministry said two Germans, four Indians and 13 Nepalese were among the 22 missing. The nationalities of the two passengers are unknown.

Pokhara is located 80 miles west of the capital, Kathmandu.

An airline official told Reuters, asking not to be named, that the plane lost contact with the control tower five minutes before landing in Jomsom. Tara Air primarily operates turboprop Twin Otter aircraft. Flight tracker Flightradar24 said the missing plane made its maiden flight in April 1979.

The spokesman added that the Nepalese army has been recruited to help in the search for the missing plane.

Officials told Reuters the cloudy weather was preventing search helicopters from flying to the area of ​​the last known flight site. The country’s meteorological office said there had been a thick cover of clouds in Pokhara Jomsun district since morning. A search helicopter was forced to return to Jomsom due to the circumstances.

“Helicopters are ready to take off for search from Kathmandu, Pokhara and Jomsom as soon as the weather improves. Army and police search teams have left for the site,” the Nepal Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement.

See also  Live News: The review will launch the process that led to the appointment of the BBC's chief

Police official Prem Kumar Dhani said a ground-based search and rescue team was sent to the area near Mount Dhaulagiri, the world’s seventh highest peak at 26,795 feet (8,167 metres).

Nepal, home to eight of the 14 highest mountains in the world, including Mount Everest, has a record of air accidents. Its weather can change suddenly and the airstrips are usually in mountainous locations that are difficult to reach.

in 2016, a Tara Air plane crashed while flying on the same path as the plane that went missing on Sunday. This incident involved a recently acquired Twin Otter flying in clear conditions.
And the, In early 2018an American Bangladesh Airlines plane from Dhaka to Kathmandu crashed on landing and caught fire, killing 51 of the 71 people on board.