A 72-passenger plane on a domestic flight has crashed in Nepal with devastating consequences.
The last moments of passengers on the flight and the moment the plane crashed were unwittingly captured by one of the passengers who was filming the city below them as the plane descended.
From the footage, it appeared the crash took the passengers unawares as there appeared to be no panic on the faces of the passengers captured by the phone camera some minutes before the crash.
The camera pans around the cabin where passengers appeared to be discussing and then suddenly there was a short cry and a shockwave ending in flares of fire and smoke.
It appeared all the passengers and crew on board the flight perished in the crash.
Hundreds of rescue workers were scouring the hillside where the plane carrying 72 people from the capital Kathmandu, went down.
Yeti Airlines, which operated the flight, said there were 72 people onboard – 68 passengers and four crew.
According to an airport official, the foreign nationals on board included: one Australian, one French, one Argentinian, four Russians, five Indians, two South Koreans and one person from Ireland.
“We expect to recover more bodies,” said an army spokesperson, Krishna Bhandari, said. “The plane has broken into pieces.”
The plane crashed between the old and new Pokhara airports in central Nepal.
Footage shared on social media, which appeared to be shot just after the crash, showed raging flames on the ground and black smoke billowing into the sky from debris strewn across the crash site.
Another unverified clip shared online showed a plane flying at a low altitude over a residential area banking sharply to the left, followed by a loud explosion.
The wreckage was on fire and rescue workers were trying to put out the blaze, local official Gurudutta Dhakal said.
Responders have already reached there and trying to douse the fire,” Dhakal said. “All agencies are now focused on first dousing the fire and rescuing the passengers.”
The twin-engine ATR 72 aircraft was flying from Kathmandu, the Himalayan country’s capital, an airport official said. After news of the crash broke the country’s prime minister, Pushpa Kamal Dahal, called an emergency cabinet meeting.
The weather was clear, said Jagannath Niroula, spokesman for Nepal’s Civil Aviation Authority.
Local TV showed rescue workers scrambling around broken sections of the aircraft. Some of the ground near the crash site was scorched, with licks of flames visible.
“The plane is burning,” said police official Ajay K.C., adding that rescue workers were having difficulty reaching the site in a gorge between two hills near the tourist town’s airport.
The craft made contact with the airport from Seti Gorge at 10:50 a.m. (0505 GMT), the aviation authority said in a statement. “Then it crashed.”
The crash is Nepal’s deadliest since March 2018, when a US-Bangla Dash 8 turboprop flight from Dhaka crashed on landing in Kathmandu, killing 51 of the 71 people on board, according to Aviation Safety Network.
At least 309 people have died since 2000 in plane or helicopter crashes in Nepal, – home to eight of the world’s 14 highest mountains, including Everest – where the weather can change suddenly and make for hazardous conditions. The European Union has banned Nepali airlines from its airspace since 2013, citing safety concerns.
Watch the clip recorded by a passenger on the ill-fated flight below 👇;
Moment passenger’s phone was recording as 72 passenger plane crashed in Nepal #NepalPlaneCrash #Nepal pic.twitter.com/OmyGhXUMoG
— 9jaspectators (@spectatorsng) January 15, 2023