Nepal Plane Crash: Black Box of ill-fated Tara Air flight found, all 22 bodies recovered
Nepali Plane Crash update: The search and rescue team comprising Nepali Army has recovered the flight voice recorder of Tara Air that crashed two days ago in the Himalayas.
- The Nepali search and rescue teams recovered the the flight's voice recorder
- Bodies of all 22 ill-fated people onboard were discovered
- "Nothing except the wreckage is left at the crash site now," official said
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The Nepali search and rescue teams recovered the flight's voice recorder today along with the bodies of all ill-fated 22 people onboard of a small Tara Air plane that crashed in the Himalayas two days earlier. Two Germans, four Indians and 16 Nepalis were on the De Havilland Canada DHC-6-300 Twin Otter aircraft that crashed 15 minutes after taking off from the tourist town of Pokhara, 125 km (80 miles) west of Kathmandu, on Sunday (May 29) morning. The plane was bound for Jomsom, a popular tourist and pilgrimage site, 80 km (50 miles) northwest of Pokhara, on what should have been a 20-minute flight.
A spokesperson for the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN) said the plane had only the voice recorder to preserve ground to air and air to air conversations. Modern planes have two such black boxes - a flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder.
"Nothing except the wreckage is left at the crash site now," Deo Chandra Lal Karna told Reuters. "All the bodies and the black box have been recovered." Operated by privately owned Tara Air, the aircraft made its first flight in April 1979, according to flight-tracking website Flightradar24. Soldiers and rescue workers had retrieved 21 bodies from the wreckage, strewn across a steep slope at an altitude of around 14,500 feet, on May 30.
Bodies of 10 victims were brought to Kathmandu on Monday, and the remaining 12 bodies would be flown into the capital on Tuesday and released to the families following an autopsy and identification, Karna said. The Nepali government has set up a five-member panel to determine the cause of the crash and suggest preventive measures for the aviation sector.
Nepal, home to eight of the world's 14 highest mountains, including Mt. Everest, has a history of air accidents. In early 2018, a US-Bangla Airlines flight from Dhaka to Kathmandu crashed on landing and caught fire, killing 51 of the 71 people on board. In 1992, all 167 people aboard a Pakistan International Airlines plane were killed when it ploughed into a hill as it tried to land in Kathmandu.
(With inputs from Reuters)
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