SF Gate: Plane carrying 302 elite Iranian soldiers crashes in Iran, killing all aboard

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 Fially, a good plane crash.
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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SF Gate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/news/archive/2003/02/20/i=
nternational0348EST0465.DTL
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Thursday, February 20, 2003 (AP)
Plane carrying 302 elite Iranian soldiers crashes in Iran, killing all aboa=
rd
ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer


   (02-20) 06:29 PST TEHRAN, Iran (AP) --
   Search teams pressed through fog, rain and strong wind Thursday to recov=
er
some mutilated bodies from the mountainous site of a military plane crash
that killed 302 members of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard, the state
news agency reported.
   In the country's worst plane crash, the Russian-made Ilyushin crashed in=
to
a mountain Wednesday evening amid bad weather en route from Zahedan, on
the Pakistani border, to Kerman, about 500 miles southeast of Tehran.
   All aboard -- 18 crew members and 284 passengers -- were members of the
Revolutionary Guards, an elite group under the direct control of supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The guards protect Iran's borders and
defend ruling hard-liners in this ultraconservative society.
   A Revolutionary Guard commander in charge of relief operations, Ali
Jafari, told The Associated Press that more than 600 relief workers were
searching the area to collect remains. He said bulldozers had created
roads overnight to facilitate access to the site of the crash.
   Two helicopters that tried to reach the crash site flew back to their ba=
se
in Kerman because of bad weather, Jafari said. The weather was also was
slowing down mountaineers and hampering efforts to retrieve remains, the
official Islamic Republic News Agency reported.
   Relief workers, who IRNA said earlier had confirmed there were no
survivors, have set up more than a dozen tents to provide support for
crash site search and recovery efforts.
   The Revolutionary Guards have encircled a big area at the crash site,
preventing people from approaching and restricting journalists. Many
relatives of the victims cried as armed guards prevented them from
climbing to the site.
   Tha aircraft crashed in the Sirach Mountains, failing to clear the top of
a peak by about 330 feet, Jafari said. The crash took place about 20 miles
from the plane's destination.
   Air traffic controllers at Kerman airport said the pilot radioed about b=
ad
weather and strong winds before losing contact at a bout 5:30 p.m., Tehran
television reported. There was heavy snowfall in many parts of Iran on
Tuesday and Wednesday, including Zahedan, which hadn't seen snow in three
years.
   Search teams working early Thursday found part of the debris, including
the plane's wing, near a tunnel that cuts through the mountains, the news
agency reported.
   The possibility of terrorism was not raised by any of the media reporting
the crash.
   A senior official in Zahedan told The Associated Press that several of t=
he
victims were senior officers of the guard.
   The crash was the latest in a string of plane accidents the Iranian
government has blamed on U.S. sanctions, arguing that they have prevented
the country from repairing and replacing its aging fleet. Trade between
Iran and the United States has been frozen under sanctions Washington
imposed after the 1979 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.
   Since the Islamic revolution that year, Iran has supplemented its fleet =
of
Boeing and European-made Airbus airliners with planes bought or leased
from the former Soviet Union. Iran is not allowed to buy European-made
Airbuses because about 40 percent of their parts are U.S.-made.
   Tehran television quoted an anonymous official as saying the forces had
gone to the impoverished Sistan-Baluchestan province, of which Zahedan is
the capital, for an "important mission."
   Another official, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity, said the forces were in Zahedan to prepare for the visit of
Khamenei, who was scheduled to tour the city on Friday. It was not clear
whether that visit would still take place.
   The government issued a statement offering condolences to the families of
the victims. The governor-general of Kerman, Mohammad Ali Karimi, declared
three days of mourning beginning Friday. Thursday was an Islamic holiday
in Iran, the feast of Velayat, when Shiite Muslims believe Islam's prophet
Mohammad appointed his son-in-law, Ali, as his successor.
   Wednesday's crash was the deadliest in Iranian history, with the toll
surpassing the 290 killed on July 3, 1988, when an Iran Air A300 Airbus
was shot down over the Persian Gulf by the USS Vincennes. The U.S.
military said it misidentified the plane as an Iranian fighter, an account
disputed by Iran.
   In December, Transportation Minister Ahmad Khorram acknowledged that
Iran's air industry was suffering from U.S. sanctions on purchase of
American-made planes and warned of air disasters if the trade ban wasn't
lifted.
   The minister, speaking days after the Dec. 23 crash of a Ukrainian An-140
plane that killed 46 scientists, said several of Iran's aging Boeing and
Airbus planes have been grounded because of technical problems and lack of
spare parts. He said Iran's fleet had "reached a crisis point."
   In February 2002, a Russian-made Tupolev Tu-154 airliner carrying 119
people smashed into snow-covered mountains not far from its destination of
Khorramabad, 230 miles southwest of Tehran.
   In May 2001, 30 people -- including the then transportation minister --
died when a Russian-made YAK-40 crashed in bad weather.

=20
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Copyright 2003 AP

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