
Air India received nine notices for safety violations in six months, Indian minister says
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The Sun
10 hours ago
- The Sun
Russian passenger plane crashes in far east, 50 feared dead
MOSCOW: A Soviet-era Antonov An-24 passenger plane carrying nearly 50 people crashed in Russia's far east on Thursday, with initial reports indicating no survivors. Emergency services confirmed the aircraft, operated by Siberia-based Angara Airlines, was found burning in a forested area near Tynda. The plane, built in 1976, was en route from Blagoveshchensk to Tynda when it disappeared from radar. Regional governor Vasily Orlov stated there were 43 passengers, including five children, and six crew members on board. However, the emergencies ministry reported a slightly lower figure of around 40. Debris was located approximately 15 km from Tynda, a remote town near the Chinese border. Yuliya Petina, an emergency services official, said a Mi-8 helicopter spotted the burning fuselage. 'Rescuers continue to make their way to the scene of the accident,' she wrote on Telegram. Authorities have launched an investigation into the crash. Unverified footage from a helicopter, circulating on social media, showed the wreckage in a densely wooded area. – Reuters


The Star
13 hours ago
- The Star
Russian plane missing with around 50 people on board in Amur region, Interfax says
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian air traffic control lost contact with an An-24 passenger plane with about 50 people on board in the eastern Amur region, the Interfax and SHOT news outlets reported on Thursday. (Reporting by Marina Bobrova, writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Kim Coghill)


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Teacher dies saving students from inferno in Bangladesh jet crash
DHAKA (Reuters) -When a Bangladesh Air Force fighter jet crashed into her school and erupted in a fireball on Monday, Maherin Chowdhury rushed to save some of the hundreds of students and teachers facing mortal danger, placing their safety before her own. The 46-year-old English teacher went back again and again into a burning classroom to rescue her students, even as her own clothes were engulfed in flames, her brother, Munaf Mojib Chowdhury, told Reuters by telephone. Maherin died on Monday after suffering near total burns on her body. She is survived by her husband and two teenaged sons. "When her husband called her, pleading with her to leave the scene and think of her children, she refused, saying 'they are also my children, they are burning. How can I leave them?'" Chowdhury said. At least 29 people, most of them children, were killed when the F-7 BGI crashed into the school, trapping them in fire and debris. The military said the aircraft had suffered mechanical failure. "I don't know exactly how many she saved, but it may have been at least 20. She pulled them out with her own hands," he said, adding that he found out about his sister's act of bravery when he visited the hospital and met students she had rescued. The jet had taken off from a nearby air base on a routine training mission, the military said. After experiencing mechanical failure the pilot tried to divert the aircraft away from populated areas, but it crashed into the campus. The pilot was among those killed. "When the plane crashed and fire broke out, everyone was running to save their lives, she ran to save others," Khadija Akter, the headmistress of the school's primary section, told Reuters on phone about Maherin. She was buried on Tuesday in her home district of Nilphamari, in northern Bangladesh. (Reporting by Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Writing by Shilpa Jamkhandikar, Editing by William Maclean)