SFGate: Indonesian plane crashes, at least 98 dead

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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
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nal/i192127D22.DTL
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Wednesday, May 20, 2009 (AP)
Indonesian plane crashes, at least 98 dead
By AGUS BASUKI, Associated Press Writer


   (05-20) 08:59 PDT MAGETAN, Indonesia (AP) --
   An Indonesian military plane carrying troops and their families caught
fire and nose-dived into a residential neighborhood Wednesday, killing 98
people and putting the spotlight back on the country's poor aviation
safety record.
   More than a dozen people were injured, many with severe burns.
   Survivors said they heard at least two loud explosions and felt the C-130
Hercules wobbling from left to right as it careened to the ground. The
transporter slammed into a row of houses and then skidded into a rice
paddy, its fuselage completely shattered.
   "People were screaming hysterically as the plane was going down. We were
being thrown around all over the place," Pvt. Saputra told Internet news
portal Detik.com. "Then it just blew up and I found myself lying in a
field, 20 yards (meters) from the wreckage. I couldn't stand up and some
villagers came to help me."
   "Fire was rising up to the sky," said Saputra, who suffered head and arm
injuries. "I just submitted myself to God."
   Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous nation, has been hit by a
string of airline crashes, both commercial and military, putting it under
international pressure to improve maintenance and safety regulations. But
the air force fleet, long underfunded and handicapped by a recently lifted
U.S. ban on weapons sales, has been especially hard hit.
   Just last week another military transporter lost its landing gear and
slammed into a house, injuring four people, and 24 were killed when a
Fokker 27 crashed into an airport hangar last month during a training
mission.
   On Wednesday, black smoke billowed in the air as soldiers carried the de=
ad
and injured through brilliant green paddies to waiting ambulances.
   Military spokesman Sagom Tamboen said the transport plane, built in 1980,
was on a routine flight from the capital, Jakarta, and went down before it
could reach its destination — an air force base in East Java
province.
   It was not clear what caused the crash, but President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, a former army general, promised that a thorough investigation
would be carried out.
   "I heard at least two big explosions and saw flashes of fire inside the
plane," said Lamidi, a 41-year-old farmer who was working in a nearby rice
field. It hit a tree and "the wing snapped off."
   The plane was carrying at least 110 passengers and crew, including troops
and their families, when it went down in Geplak village, 325 miles (520
kilometers) east of the capital, Jakarta.
   At least 98 people were killed, including two on the ground, and 15 othe=
rs
were injured, said Bambang Samudro, chief of the military air base in
Magetan.
   The air force has operated C-130s — the backbone of its transport
wing — since the early 1960s, when it received a batch of 10 from
the United States in exchange for the release of a CIA bomber pilot shot
down in 1958 while supporting an anti-government mutiny.
   About 40 more were delivered over the next 20 years, many secondhand and
provided by Washington before the Clinton administration imposed sanctions
on military deliveries because of violence that broke out during East
Timor's 1999 break for independence.
   The air force complained that many of the planes quickly became
unserviceable because of the lack of spare parts. Though the embargo was
lifted several years ago, the air worthiness of many remained in question.
   There also have been a series of commercial airline crashes in recent
years which killed more than 120 people. The EU responded by banning all
Indonesian carriers from flying to Europe.
   ___
   Associated Press writer Slobodan Lekic in Brussels contributed to this
report. -------------------------------------------------------------------=
---
Copyright 2009 AP

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