Eleven dead in Russian military plane crash

Russia, November 07: A Russian military plane crashed into the sea during a training exercise in Russia’s Far East region, leaving all eleven crew members missing and presumed dead, officials said.

The Tupolev Tu-142 plane disappeared from radar as it was coming to the end of a training mission Friday over the Tatarski Strait that divides Russia’s Far East island of Sakhalin from the mainland, the defence ministry said.

”Given the conditions under which the catastrophe took place, we can presume that all the crew aboard the Tu-142 were killed,” a source in the emergencies ministry told the RIA Novosti news agency.

”But search operations will continue as long as there is the slightest hope of finding someone alive,” the official added.

Military sources told Russian news agencies that there were 11 crew aboard the plane. Previously, officials had said there were 10 crew members.

An emergencies ministry source in the Khabarovsk region in the Far East told RIA Novosti that in the early morning an object was found at a depth of 44 metres underwater “which appears to be the fuselage of the plane”.

”Objects are being investigated at water level which could be fragments of the plane,” the source said.

Search teams lead by Russia’s Pacific Fleet were currently searching for the plane’s black boxes and could use special submersibles to locate them, RIA Novosti said.

A defence ministry source told the agency that the most likely cause of the crash was a technical fault. Investigators have opened a criminal enquiry into the possible infringement of flight rules and preparation, it said.

All flights by the air force of the Russian Pacific Fleet have been suspended pending the results of an investigation into the accident, Russian news agencies said.

Deadly accidents are a frequent occurrence in Russia’s armed forces whose military hardware still includes ageing Soviet-era equipment.

The decorated commander of the country’s celebrated military aerobatic stunt team, the Russian Knights, was killed in August when two Sukhoi Su-27 fighters collided in practice for the annual air show.

The Tu-142 is a reconnaissance anti-submarine warfare jet which was first introduced into the armed forces in 1971. Some 75 Tu-142 jets are currently employed by the Russian armed forces, the ITAR-TASS news agency said.

—Agencies