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Plane misses runway, lands on lava - by Nampa-AP |
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| 20 November 2009 |
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KINSHASA, Congo – A passenger plane overshot the runway yesterday, landing on hardened lava surrounding an airport in eastern Congo, injuring 20 people, a UN-run radio station reported.
The plane was flying from Kinshasa to Goma, and passengers had warned the crew that there were heavy clouds, Radio Okapi said. An official from the UN mission in Congo, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he does not have permission to speak with media, said there were 117 passengers on board. They included the governor of North Kivu province, who was not hurt. CAA (Compagnie Africaine d’Aviation) operated the plane. A 2002 volcanic eruption sent lava oozing onto Goma’s runway, truncating it from more than 3 kilometres to less than 1.5 km. Authorities have not removed all of the lava rock. A cargo plane burst into flames after hitting hardened lava on the airport runway in 2007, killing at least eight people. And in April 2008, a DC-9 rammed into a bustling market after failing to lift off from Goma’s airport, killing at least 40 people, most of them on the ground. Congo has experienced more fatal plane crashes than any other African country since 1945, according to the Aviation Safety Network. However, flying remains one of the most dependable ways to cross the vast country. The country, which is bigger than Western Europe, has only 500 kilometres of tarred roads. – Nampa-AP Back to Top |
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