Pakistan plane crashes, all 152 on board dead

ISLAMABAD,  (Reuters) – A Pakistani passenger plane  crashed in heavy rain near Islamabad yesterday, killing all  152 people on board, officials said, in the worst aviation  accident in Pakistan.

The Airbus 321, belonging to a private airline crashed into  a heavily wooded and hard-to-access hillside while flying from  the southern port city of Karachi.

Federal Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira said 115  bodies had been recovered so far but bad weather and difficult  terrain above the city had hampered search efforts. “Unfortunately, no one survived … Many bodies are not in  good shape,” Kaira told a news conference. Twelve bodies had been identified so far, but “the crash  was very terrible. There was fire. It’s difficult to recognise  the bodies”. Passengers’ remains were badly damaged in the crash and DNA  tests would be used to identify the victims, he said.

Two Americans were among the victims, a U.S. embassy  spokesman told Reuters. He had no further details.

While thick fog and rainy weather are considered the most  likely reasons for the crash, Kaira declined to rule out  sabotage and said all possibilities would be investigated.

Kaira said the plane’s “black box” data recorder had yet to  be recovered.

The plane lost contact with the control room of the  Islamabad International Airport at 0443 GMT. It was carrying  146 passengers and six crew members.

“The pilot was given directions to land either on runway I  or II,” Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters. “The  plane was at 2,600 feet (792 metres) before landing but  suddenly it went to 3,000, which was unexplained.”

“If the visibility to the runway was so poor then it should  have been diverted.”

Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhatar said the control tower at  the airport had been sealed and a team would examine the data  recorder and radio traffic between the plane and the tower.

“If you look at the position of the wreckage it’s clear  that the plane went beyond safety margins. It should have  manoeuvred within five miles of the runway but it did not  happen,” said Ejaz Haroon, managing director of state-run  airline PIA.