Chinese Jet Crashes Into Sea With 225 Aboard

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Chinese Jet Crashes Into Sea With 225 Aboard

By Simon Kwong and Benjamin Kang Lim
Reuters

PENGU, TAIWAN (May 25) - A China Airlines Boeing 747-200 with 225 passengers
and crew on board crashed into the sea shortly after takeoff on Saturday en
route from Taiwan to Hong Kong.

Military search and rescue teams picked up the body of a man off the
Taiwan-held Penghu islands, also known as the Pescadores, and spotted a cabin
door, life vests and an oil slick.

Cable television station ETTV said large numbers of bodies were floating in
the sea.

An official with China Airlines, Taiwan's main carrier, said the plane did
not issue a Mayday call before it disappeared from radar screens about 20
minutes after takeoff.

There was no official word on what might have caused the crash, and Vice
Transport Minister Chang Chia-juk said there was no evidence of a midair
blast. "We did not find an explosion in the air," Chang told reporters.

However, cable network TVBS reported that a group of farmers in western
Taiwan found debris with China Airlines' logo in their fields on Saturday.

TVBS showed footage of farmers in the coastal county of Changhua -- about 75
km (47 miles) from the crash site -- holding up scraps of foam padding and
inflight magazines.

"I heard a big bang," a fisherman identified only by the name Lee told ETTC
cable television.

"I thought it was mainland fishermen dynamiting fish."

Dynamite is used illegally off the coast of Taiwan to stun fish and make them
easy to catch as they float to the surface.

As night fell, naval ships with powerful searchlights joined the search for
survivors.

The weather bureau reported cloud in the area but no rain at the time of the
accident.

"Because it's at sea, we can't determine (what happened) before finding
anything concrete. But basically, we have found some life vests floating at
sea," Premier Yu Shyi-kun told reporters.

China Airlines said Flight CI 611 was carrying 206 passengers, including
three infants, and 19 crew. The plane was almost 23 years old, one of the
oldest in the fleet, and had logged almost 65,000 flight hours.

EMERGENCY CABINET TEAM

Cabinet spokesman Chuang Suo-han said the cabinet had formed an emergency
team to deal with the situation."

The plane took off at 3.08 p.m. (0708 GMT). Flying time from Taiwan to Hong
Kong is one and a half hours.

"The plane abruptly disappeared from the radar," transportation minister Lin
Lin-san told reporters.

Fourteen passengers were from Hong Kong, Macau and China. There were two
Singaporeans and one European on board, airline officials said.

In the last major crash in Taiwan in October 2000, a Singapore Airlines plane
crashed at Taipei airport killing 83 of 179 people on board.

China Airlines was taken over by its first woman chief executive officer in
2000 to shed an appalling image after three deadly accidents in six years.

A China Airlines MD 11 crashed on landing in Hong Kong in September 1999 and
all but three of the 315 passengers and crew survived. More than 200 were
injured.

In February 1998, a China Airlines Airbus carrying holidaymakers back from
Bali crashed and disintegrated at Taipei airport, killing 196 aboard and
seven on the ground.

That disaster followed an April 1994 crash in Nagoya, Japan, when a China
Airlines Airbus A300-600R stalled during landing. Only seven of the 271
passengers and crew survived.


Leo/ORD
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