-
Subscribe
-
Recent Posts
- Shorter Question Everything
- AP Exclusive: Pentagon gun was from Tenn. police
- Contractors Tied to Effort to Track and Kill Militants
- Spy Takes US/Israeli Secrets to Grave
- Millions Skimmed from $150 Billion Iraq Rebuilding Program
- Shorter Question Everything
- Georgians panic over mock TV news report of Russian invasion
- ‘Secret Team’ Airlines? Dominican republic: Authorities investigate “mysterious” plane vanished from radar
- Kissinger admitted to hospital with virus
- Saakashvili pays US firms to lobby for him in Washington
-
Recent Comments
- xxxevilgrinxxx on Dubai calls for Netanyahu prosecution over terror
- Mirza Ferdous Alam on Dubai calls for Netanyahu prosecution over terror
- Anonymous on The F.B.I.’s Anthrax Case
- xxxevilgrinxxx on Man Who Crashed Plane into IRS Building Posted Online Manifesto
- richard sievert on Man Who Crashed Plane into IRS Building Posted Online Manifesto
Tweets
F.D.BrightlyGood Reads









Russian military plane crashes in Pacific, 11 missing
Reuters
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A Russian military plane with 11 people on board crashed in the Pacific Ocean during a training flight late on Friday, the Defense Ministry said.
It said in a statement a search was under way for the crew of the Tu-142 aircraft. But RIA news agency quoted a military source as saying there was little chance of finding survivors.
The anti-submarine aircraft disappeared from radar screens while flying over the Tatar Strait separating the Russian mainland from the island of Sakhalin, the ministry said on its website, www.mil.ru.
Russia has one of the world’s worst air safety records, with elderly Soviet-era planes and dated airport facilities.
The Vesti television channel showed pictures of debris including broken seats close to the crash site.
Interfax news agency cited an unidentified source close to the commission investigating the crash as saying the most likely cause was a mechanical fault.
Eleven people died when a cargo aircraft crashed this month in the eastern Russian region of Yakutia.
Last year, all 88 passengers and crew aboard an Aeroflot-Nord Boeing aircraft died when the plane crashed near the Ural mountains. Russian investigators said poor training was the primary cause of the crash.
In 2006, 170 people were killed when a Tu-154 plane crashed in Ukraine on a flight to St Petersburg.
(Reporting by Robin Paxton; Editing by Charles Dick)