NYTimes.com Article: Jet Crash in Algeria Kills 102 Aboard

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Jet Crash in Algeria Kills 102 Aboard

March 6, 2003
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS






Filed at 3:35 p.m. ET

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) -- An Air Algerie passenger jet, one
of its engines ablaze, crashed shortly after takeoff deep
in the Sahara Desert on Thursday, killing 102 people on
board, the airline said. One person survived.

The Boeing 737, flight 6289, crashed after taking off from
Tamanrasset bound for the Algerian capital, Algiers, 1,000
miles to the north.

Terrorism was not suspected, said an airline spokesman,
Hamid Hamdi.

``There was a mechanical problem on takeoff,'' he said.
``There is no element that leads us to think there was a
terrorist attack.''

Witnesses at the Tamanrasset airport and airline officials
said one of the plane's two jet engines caught fire as it
was taking off.

Algeria, an oil- and gas-rich nation in North Africa, has
been torn by a decade-long insurgency by Islamic militants
that has left tens of thousands dead.

Seven French citizens were among the 97 passengers, the
government APS news agency reported. Hamdi said he knew of
six Europeans aboard. The remaining passengers and six crew
members were Algerians, he said.

Hamdi said 39 passengers were headed for Algiers and that
58 others were to disembark at a stop in Ghardaia.

``Unfortunately, we know only of one survivor,'' he said.
The survivor's nationality was not known.

Prime Minister Ali Benflis set up a crisis unit at airports
in Algiers and Tamanrasset to deal with the crash, thought
to be the first in the history of Algerian commercial
aviation. An investigative unit was also set up at the
Tamanrasset airport.

Hamdi, the airline spokesman, insisted that the downed
plane had been well maintained.

``This Boeing 737-200 was, at takeoff, in perfect working
order,'' he said. State-run Air Algerie was established in
1953 and this was its first crash, he said.

Interior Minister Yazid Zerhouni and Transportation
Minister Abdelmalek Sellal were headed to the scene.

Tamanrasset, in the Hoggar Mountains, is a stop for Sahara
Desert travelers in a region of ancient archaeological
sites and prehistoric paintings and engravings.

Weather did not appear to be a factor in the crash. Hamdi
said it was sunny.

Tamanrasset is also a meeting place for Tuaregs, nomadic
people known for their blue robes.

More than 120,000 people have been killed in the insurgency
launched by Islamic militants after they were shut of out
parliamentary elections in 1992.

In late 1994, one of Algeria's most radical groups, the
Armed Islamic Group, hijacked an Air France plane, killing
three passengers. Most international carriers stopped
flights to Algeria after the hijacking, and Air Algerie
flights to Paris were suspended for two years.

Algeria's army has been hunting down insurgents who refused
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's offer of amnesty for some
militants willing to surrender their weapons. But militant
groups have struck back, stepping up attacks on army
convoys.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/international/AP-Algeria-Plane-Crash.html?ex=1047984712&ei=1&en=96cee92c3d4b1ff9



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