Friday, October 05, 2007

CONGO MINISTER SACKED AFTER CRASH !

The exact death toll from Thursday's crash is still unclear. The Democratic Republic of Congo's transport minister has been sacked one day after a plane crashed into a residential area of the capital.
Remy Henry Kuseyo Gatanga had shown he was incapable of reforming the aviation sector, a presidential spokesman said.
More than 30 people died when the plane landed in Kinshasa sending a fireball and thick smoke into the air.
Police and government sources say one of the crew - a mechanic - survived the crash and is recovering in hospital.
Firefighters were trying to put out the flames from the cockpit -The BBC's Emery Agalu Makumeno

Chaos at crash scene
In pics: Congo crash search

Air accidents are frequent in DR Congo, where many airlines fly ageing planes.
According to the African Airlines Association, the country has accounted for well over half of all the air crashes in Africa over the last decade.
One out of every five fatal air accidents happens in Africa.
The Antonov 26 cargo plane, owned by the Congolese airline Africa 1, crashed shortly after take-off from nearby Ndjili airport.
It was bound for Tshikapa, in the central province of Kasai-Occidental.
Presidential spokesman Kudura Kasongo announced the minister's sacking on state television.
The BBC's Emery Agalu Makumeno in Kinshasa says last month the minister banned all Antonovs from flying over Congolese territory, but had to backtrack a week ago because the move proved so unpopular.
Aircraft are used extensively for transport in DR Congo, a huge country where there are few paved roads.
A United Nations spokesman in DRC, Michel Bonnardeaux, told the BBC on Thursday he had heard from local police sources that two people on board had survived - an air hostess and a mechanic.
The Humanitarian Affairs Ministry confirmed to Reuters news agency on Friday that a Congolese mechanic was alive.
At least 20 private companies in DR Congo operate mainly old planes built in the former Soviet Union.
Last year, the European Union banned all but one of the country's air companies, including Africa 1, from operating in Europe.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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