Of the 162 passengers and 10 crew on board the Spanair jet bound
for Las Palmas in the Canary Islands on Wednesday, Aug.
20, 19
people survived with severe injuries, according to Spain's
Transport Minister Magdalena Alvarez.
Two black boxes were found at the crash site and were to be
examined Thursday.
One engine of the Spanair MD-82, which also had a Lufthansa flight
number, reportedly caught fire as the jet attempted to take off
from Madrid-Barajas airport at 2:45 p.m. local time on Wednesday.
Experts were divided on whether the fire in the engine was the
cause of the accident.
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The 19 people who survived were severely injured
Spanish media said the plane's take-off had been delayed for one
hour while an exterior temperature gauge was repaired.
Spain's Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero interrupted his
vacation to travel to the scene of the accident. "The government is
overwhelmed, very affected, as are all Spanish citizens, by this
tragedy," he said.
German investigators join in
Because the flight was a code sharing agreement with German carrier
Lufthansa, Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) is
assisting Spanish authorities in identifying the victims of the
accident.
Spain had accepted an offer by the German government overnight, a
BKA spokeswoman said.
"We are anxious for more information on whether German citizens are
involved," she said.
The nationalities of the victims and survivors have not been
confirmed, though Spanish media reported that four Germans, two
Swedes, a Chilean and a Colombian were among the survivors.
Lufthansa said initially that seven passengers had checked in on
the German carrier's flight number and that four of them were
Germans. The German embassy in Madrid said it was in close contact
with the Spanish authorities.
Condolences from across Europe
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Two black boxes were found at the scene of the crash
Words of sympathy poured in Wednesday from political leaders across
Europe. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was shocked by the number
of dead and injured and had sent a message to Zapatero, said her
spokesman.
"At this sad moment, Italy, united with your country by traditional
bonds of friendship, feels particularly close to the Spanish
people, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano told Spanish King Juan
Carlos.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, French President Nicolas Sarkozy
and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown were also among those who
expressed their deep sadness.
The accident was Spain's worst air disaster since 180 people were
killed when a Colombian aircraft crashed in Madrid in 1983. The
deadliest plane crash in the history of civil aviation also
occurred in Spain, when two Boeing 747s collided at Tenerife
airport on the Canary Islands in 1977; 583 people were killed.
(Deutsche Welle)
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