Text Only
Search

 
Search Continues for Brazil Plane Crash Victims


18 July 2007
Wagner report (mp3) - Download 618k audio clip
Listen to Wagner report (mp3) audio clip

Brazilian rescue workers are continuing to search for victims of a plane crash at the main airport in the city of Sao Paulo. In Miami, Brian Wagner reports that officials say nearly 190 people died when the plane overshot the runway while trying to land and crashed into neighboring buildings.

Rescue workers have been struggling to locate bodies in the smoldering wreckage of the plane that crashed at Brazil's busiest airport. Officials say they have recovered some 100 bodies since the incident late Tuesday, and rescue workers are continuing to search for others.

Firemen organize around buildings set on fire by a TAM airlines A320 aircraft that crashed in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 17 July 2007
Firemen organize around buildings set on fire by a TAM airlines A320 aircraft that crashed in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 17 July 2007
Scores of rescue workers were called to extinguish intense flames that erupted after the plane overshot the runway and crashed into a busy cargo terminal and gas station near the Congonhas airport. Officials say they believe all 186 people on the plane were killed, as well as several people on the ground.

The TAM airlines flight from the southern city of Porto Alegre was attempting to land during rainy weather when the crash occurred.

Brazil's Minister of Institutional Relations Walfrido dos Mares Guia says an investigation is under way.

He says aviation officials are expected to quickly inform the government and the Brazilian people about the causes of the crash and about safety measures that may be needed.

Firefighters work at the site where a TAM airlines commercial jet crashed in Sao Paulo, 18 July 2007
Firefighters work at the site where a TAM airlines commercial jet crashed in Sao Paulo, 18 July 2007
Witnesses say the Airbus 320 accelerated near the end of the runway, in what officials say was an apparent attempt to abort the landing and regain altitude. The plane left the runway and and flew over a busy city street, before crashing.

Aviation experts say rainy weather likely played a factor, as well as the condition of the airport, which was renovated in recent months.

Brazil's Globo news channel broadcast a recording of conversations between air traffic controllers and pilots of a different plane, who were preparing to land at the airport, also on Tuesday.

One controller told pilots to take care not to land near the start of the runway, because it was slippery.

Sao Paulo-based journalist Dan Horch says Congonhas airport, which serves as a key hub in Brazil's largest city, has raised concerns in the past.

"It is well known at least here in Brazil, that that airport is dangerous in the rain," said Horch. "And they regularly close down that runway."

Brazil's airline industry has been crippled by air traffic controller strikes in recent months, which have caused massive flight delays and cancellations.

Aviation officials also are working to rebuild confidence in air travel after a crash last September, when a plane carrying 154 people went down after a mid-air collision.

 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Brazil Plane Crash Kills at Least 200
 
  Top Story
Obama Requests Changes to Afghan Options

  More Stories
Obama Readies for First Asia Tour
Pakistan Seeks Role in US-Afghan Policy
At Least 10 Soldiers Killed in Pakistan Clashes
Obama Honors US Military Veterans  Video clip available
French, German Leaders Commemorate Armistice Day  Audio Clip Available
Obama's Middle East Strategy Stalls
Body of Missing US Soldier Found in Afghanistan
Yemen, US Sign Military Cooperation Deal
Pirates Seize Cargo Ship in Indian Ocean
Clinton: Naval Clash Won't Stop Outreach to North Korea  Audio Clip Available
Japan to Tell Obama It Wants Okinawa Marine Base Closed  Audio Clip Available
APEC Foreign Ministers Discourage Protectionism  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Land Seizures Reportedly Intensify  Audio Clip Available