News Nation Logo

PIA flight crashes near Pakistan's Abbottabad; 47 on board feared dead

The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) Plane PK-661 With 47 People, Including Jamshed, His Wife And Deputy Commissioner Chitral Osama Warraich, On Board Crashed In Patola Village Near Pakistan Ordinance Factory, Havelian, While En Route To Islamabad From Chitral In Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province.

PTI | Updated on: 07 Dec 2016, 07:41:21 PM
PIA flight crashes near Pakistan's Abbottabad; 47 on board feared dead

Islamabad:

All 47 people on board a PIA plane, including popular pop singer-turned-Islamic preacher Junaid Jamshed and two foreigners, were feared dead on Wednesday as their Islamabad-bound flight crashed in a hilly area near Pakistan’s garrison town of Abbottabad.

The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane PK-661 with 47 people, including Jamshed, his wife and Deputy Commissioner Chitral Osama Warraich, on board crashed in Patola village near Pakistan Ordinance Factory, Havelian, while en route to Islamabad from Chitral in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province.

The national carrier’s flight departed from Chitral around 3:30 PM and was expected to land at Islamabad’s Benazir Bhutto International Airport at around 4:40 PM.

A PIA spokesman confirmed that the pilot of the ill-fated plane had given a ‘mayday’ distress call to traffic control before it went off the radar.

“The ATR aircraft flight had 42 passengers, including nine women and two infants, along with two air hostesses and three pilots,” he said. Of those on board, at least two were foreigners.

“The debris of the plane has been found. So far there is no indication of anyone’s survival,” an official said. Though officially there was no information on the cause of the crash, Aviation Herald, that reports daily about incidents and critical situations in civil aviation, said the plane had “engine problems”.

The daily citing local government sources said chances to find survivors are “bleak”. Jamshed’s brother told the media that his brother and his wife and other members of a ‘Tableegi’ (religious preaching) group were on the flight while returning from a religious tour to Chitral.

Pakistan’s former cricket captain Saeed Anwar had a narrow escape with a family member saying he was due to return on the flight but did not board it and stayed back in Chitral.

Army troops and helicopters have been mobilised to the site of the crash, Inter-Services Public Relations said.

Abid Ali, a senior official of the national disaster and management cell, said rescue work had already started at the crash site and six helicopters were being used in the operation but it would take time to recover the debris and any bodies as the crash took place in a mountainous region.

The flight initially left from Peshawar for Chitral and was returning to Islamabad from there before it went off the radar. 

For all the Latest World News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps.

First Published : 07 Dec 2016, 07:36:00 PM

Videos