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Police work to recover fourth body after plane crash at Southend Airport
Police work to recover fourth body after plane crash at Southend Airport

The Independent

time14 hours ago

  • The Independent

Police work to recover fourth body after plane crash at Southend Airport

Three bodies have been recovered from the site of a plane crash at London Southend Airport with work continuing to recover the fourth, police said. Essex Police said the aircraft, which crashed on Sunday afternoon, killing four people, was a medical flight chartered for a patient to be transported for treatment in the UK. It is understood that the patient had been dropped off and the plane was bound for its base in the Netherlands when it crashed, killing four people who were all foreign nationals. Police said the four were the plane's commander, co-pilot and a doctor, who were all men, and a female nurse. The nurse has been named in media reports as Maria Fernanda Rojaz Ortiz, 31, who was originally from Chile and was a German national. The doctor has been named in reports as German national Dr Matthias Eyl, 46. It is understood that the two pilots were Dutch. Essex Police said officers are working closely with the coroner and are not able to officially confirm the identities until formal identification has taken place. In a statement issued on Tuesday, the force said it was 'continuing to work on recovering a fourth body within the next 24 hours'. The airport remains closed until further notice. Police said it was an 'extremely complex operation which is being carried out sensitively and to give each person the dignity they deserve'. The force said it was in contact with the respective embassies of the four victims, and support for the families was also in place in their home countries. Chief Superintendent Morgan Cronin said: 'Our response to this incredibly complex incident continues today in parallel with our colleagues at the AAIB (Air Accidents Investigation Branch). 'Everything we are doing is aimed at finding and preserving the physical and electronic evidence which we hope will help build an accurate picture of what happened. 'The scale of the work being undertaken by many agencies here at London Southend Airport should not be underestimated. 'That work at the scene will continue today and further into the week as we seek to find the answers to what happened here on Sunday afternoon.' Witnesses told of seeing a 'fireball', while images of fire and black smoke were shared on social media after Sunday's crash. The AAIB work includes support of police victim recovery activities, examination of the wreckage and evidence gathering. Police are appealing to members of the public who witnessed the crash or have video footage of it to get in touch. They are also seeking footage of any small jets – not commercial aircraft – landing at the airport on Sunday between 2.15pm and 4pm. Information and footage can be submitted online at

Doctor was among four people killed in Southend Airport plane crash - as one victim's body not yet recovered
Doctor was among four people killed in Southend Airport plane crash - as one victim's body not yet recovered

Sky News

time16 hours ago

  • Sky News

Doctor was among four people killed in Southend Airport plane crash - as one victim's body not yet recovered

A doctor was among the four people who died in a plane crash at Southend Airport - as police say they are yet to recover the body of one victim. Two Dutch pilots and a Chilean nurse, 31-year-old Maria Fernanda Rojas Ortiz, also known as Fena, died in the crash that caused a fireball at the airport on Sunday. In an update on Tuesday, Essex Police said it had recovered three bodies and "we're continuing to work on recovering a fourth body within the next 24 hours". "We're also now able to confirm the flight in question was a medical flight chartered to London Southend Airport for a patient to be transported onward for medical treatment in the UK," the force added. "On board the flight when it tragically crashed were the commander and the co-pilot - who are both men - and a nurse, a woman, and a doctor, a man, all of whom died." Police said they not yet able to officially confirm the identities of the victims. The medical transport aircraft had dropped off a patient and was beginning its journey back to the Netherlands when it crashed at about 3.48pm on Sunday. John Johnson, who was at the airport with his wife and children, said he saw a "big fireball" exploding across the sky as the plane plunged "head first into the ground". "We all waved at the pilots, and they all waved back at us," he said. "The aircraft then turned 180 degrees to face its take-off, powered up [and] rolled down the runway. "It took off and about three or four seconds [later] it started to bank heavily to its left, and then within a few seconds of that happening, it more or less inverted and crashed just head first into the ground." Mr Johnson added: "There was a big fireball. Obviously, everybody was in shock [after] witnessing it." Please refresh the page for the latest version.

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