Sunday 19 August 2012

All 31 passengers,including minister,killed in Sudanese plane crash:aviation official

 Sudan national flag
KHARTOUM, Aug. 19 (Xinhua) -- A Sudanese civil plane carrying a ministerial delegation crashed early Sunday in Sudan's South Kordofan State, killing all 31 passengers, including a minister, an aviation official told Xinhua.
"The plane, Antinov, belonging to a civil aviation company, left Khartoum at 6:00 a.m. local time (0300 GMT) carrying a ministerial delegation of 31 people," said Abdul-Hafez Abdul- Rahim, spokesperson of Sudan's Civil Aviation.
Among the killed was Minister of Guidance and Religious Endowments Ghazi al-Sadiq, the spokesman said.
"The plane flew over Taloudy airport in South Kordofan. An explosion was heard inside the mountains surrounding the area," he said, stressing "The plane crashed, killing all the people on board."
South Kordofan State has been recently witnessing armed clashes between the Sudanese army and rebels of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA)/northern sector.
Abdul-Rahim did not exclude the assumption that the plane was exposed to a hostile act, but said "there are ongoing investigations to know the facts about the incident."
"We cannot tell exactly what happened now," he said.
Sudan has seen several plane crashes in recent years.
On June 20, 2012, a Sudanese military training aircraft crashed at the air base in Port-Sudan city in eastern the country, leaving its two-member crew killed.
On December 30, 2011, six crew members were killed when a military helicopter crashed in the western region of Darfur.
In 2008, at least 11 were killed in two cargo plane crashes in Sudan.
Meanwhile the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) on Saturday ended a meeting of heads of state and government in Mozambican capital Maputo, calling for measures to ensure security in member states.
   The group leaders said the rebellion in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo)  must stop, said executive secretary of the SADC Tomaz Salomao, reading out the final communique of the summit.
   The rebels led by general Bosco Ntaganda are accused of killing civilians in the DR Congo's Kivu/North province, and the conflict in the region forced thousands of locals to flee home.
   Bosco is wanted by the Congolese army to take him to court so that he can answer criminal war charges.
   The gathering also discussed the situations in Madagascar and Zimbabwe, as well as the border conflict between Tanzania and Malawi. (Xinhua)

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