Plane crash kills 18 during take-off from Nepal’s Kathmandu airport

Pilot is sole survivor after regional passenger aircraft veered off runway and caught fire

Security personnel gather near the burning Saurya Airlines flight after it crashed during take-off at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu on July 24th. Photograph: Umesh Karki/AFP via Getty
Security personnel gather near the burning Saurya Airlines flight after it crashed during take-off at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu on July 24th. Photograph: Umesh Karki/AFP via Getty

Eighteen people were killed when a small passenger plane belonging to Nepal’s Saurya Airlines crashed and caught fire while taking off from the capital Kathmandu on Wednesday, officials said.

The plane, carrying two crew members and 17 technicians, was going for regular maintenance to Nepal’s new Pokhara airport, which opened in January last year and is equipped with aircraft maintenance hangars, they said.

“Shortly after take-off ... the aircraft veered off to the right and crashed on the east side of the runway,” the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal said in a statement.

The crash once again focused attention on the poor air safety record of the impoverished, landlocked Himalayan nation that is wedged between India and China and is heavily dependent upon air connectivity due to its limited road network.

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Nearly 350 people have died in plane or helicopter crashes in the country since 2000.

Nepal’s prime minister, K P Sharma Oli, visited the crash site and asked people to “be patient” in a social media post, without elaborating. An emergency cabinet meeting was called to form a panel to probe the crash, a government spokesman said.

Eighteen of those on board the crashed 50-seater CRJ-200 aircraft, with the registration 9N-AME, were Nepali citizens while one engineer was from Yemen, Saurya said.

Army personnel and other officials stand around the debris. Photograph: Prakash Mathema/AFP via Getty
Army personnel and other officials stand around the debris. Photograph: Prakash Mathema/AFP via Getty

“Only the captain was rescued alive and is receiving treatment at a hospital,” said Tej Bahadur Poudyal, the spokesman for Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan International Airport.

Television visuals showed fire fighters trying to put out the blaze and thick black smoke rising into the sky. Images also showed the plane flying a little above the runway and then tilting to its right before it crashed.

Other visuals showed rescue workers examining the charred remains of the plane, strewn in lush green fields, and bodies being carried to ambulances on stretchers as residents looked on.

“The plane was scheduled to undergo maintenance for a month beginning Thursday ... It is unclear why it crashed,” said Mukesh Khanal, marketing head of Saurya Airlines.

Kathmandu airport was closed temporarily following the crash but reopened within hours, officials said.

According to Flightradar24 flight tracking, Saurya currently operates two CRJ-200 regional jets, a programme that was owned by Canada’s Bombardier but which was bought by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in 2020.

Saurya says it has another CRJ-200 in its fleet.

Bombardier referred questions about the incident to Canada-based MHI RJ Aviation Group, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nepal has been criticised for its poor air safety record, where many airlines fly to small airports in remote hills and near peaks shrouded in clouds. The country is home to eight of the world’s 14 tallest mountain peaks.

Located in the heart of the Kathmandu Valley, the country’s main airport is ringed by mountains, affecting wind directions and intensity in the area and making take-off and landing a challenge for pilots.

The deadliest incident occurred in 1992, when a Pakistan International Airlines Airbus crashed into a hillside while approaching Kathmandu, killing 167 people.

Most recently, at least 72 people were killed in a Yeti airlines crash in January 2023 that was later attributed to the pilots mistakenly cutting off power. – Reuters