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  • 4
    May
    2013
    5:06am, EDT

    Two bodies found at US plane crash site in Kyrgyzstan, third crew member still missing

    An American military tanker refueling plane has crashed in the rugged mountains of Kyrgyzstan. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Olga Dzyubenko, Reuters

    BISHKEK - Remains of two bodies have been found in the wreckage of a U.S. military plane that crashed in Kyrgyzstan, and authorities are still looking for a third person who was on board, officials said.

    The refueling plane exploded in mid air when its cargo of fuel ignited on its way to Afghanistan on Friday, accident investigators said.

    Experts were still trying to work out what led up to the crash, said Kuvan Mamakeev, the Kyrgyz state prosecutor responsible for investigating transport crimes and accidents.

    "It could be because of the fuel, because of the engine, the weather conditions or the human factor," he told Reuters.

    Remains of the two bodies were found on Saturday, and a third person on board was still unaccounted for, Kyrgyzstan's Minister of Emergency Situations, Kubatbek Boronov, added.

    The Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker took off from the U.S. military transit centre at Kyrgyzstan's Manas airport, which U.S. forces maintain for operations in Afghanistan, with around 70 tonnes of fuel on board, a local ministry official said.

    The wreckage of the plane was scattered over about a 3-mile area in a mountainous area near the Kyrgyz village of Chaldovar, the official added.

    Related:

    US military refueling plane crashes in Kyrgyzstan, Pentagon says

    Officials: Seven died in US cargo plane crash in Afghanistan

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    67 comments

    Sad, I hope they can recover the other body. Whoever these military personnel were, thank you for your service.

    Show more
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  • 30
    Apr
    2013
    7:36am, EDT

    Officials: Seven died in US cargo plane crash in Afghanistan

    Officials say video appears to show a cargo plane that crashed in Afghanistan on Monday, killing seven people. Warning: Some viewers may find this video disturbing.

    By Kiko Itasaka and Akbar Shinwari, NBC News

    KABUL, Afghanistan — Seven people were killed when a U.S.-run civilian cargo plane crashed shortly after takeoff at Bagram Airfield outside of Kabul, officials said on Tuesday.

    A spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) added that the cause of Monday's crash was unknown, but dismissed Taliban claims of responsibility, saying there were no reports of "enemy activity" around the base.

    ISAF did not release details on the nationalities of those killed, referring questions to National Air Cargo, the company running the flight.

    National Air Cargo officials were not immediately available for comment. 

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Anja Niedringhaus / AP

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    The Taliban claimed in a statement on Monday that it had shot down an American plane. It said the alleged downing of the plane was part of its spring offensive, which began Sunday and which the Taliban pledged would be "monumental.”

    On Monday, ISAF's Lt. Quenton Roehricht said the plane had crashed "very shortly" after taking off at about 3 p.m. local time (6:30 a.m. ET).

    The cargo plane crash came two days after four U.S. service members were killed when their surveillance aircraft in southern Afghanistan went down in bad weather. 

    NBC News' F. Brinley Bruton and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Taliban marks start of 'monumental' spring offensive with deadly attack
    • Plane crash kills four American service members in Afghanistan
    • 2 US service members killed in Afghanistan helicopter crash

    The Taliban has issued a warning that it will increase attacks on foreign military forces in Afghanistan. NBC's Ron Mott reports.

     

    93 comments

    And we are still over there why ??

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  • Updated
    13
    Apr
    2013
    9:08pm, EDT

    Plane skids off runway into ocean on Indonesian island of Bali

    A passenger jet skidded off the runway into the ocean while attempting to land on the Indonesian resort island of Bali on Saturday, local officials said. NBC's Annabel Roberts reports.

    By Marian Smith, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A passenger jet skidded off the runway into the ocean while attempting to land on the Indonesian resort island of Bali on Saturday, local officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "The aircraft was from Bandung, West Java, and about to land in Bali Ngurah Rai Airport but it probably failed to reach the runway and fell into the sea," Lion Air spokesman Edward Sirait said according to Reuters.

    All 108 passengers and crew members survived, the company and the government said according to Reuters. Forty people were treated for broken legs, shock, and other injuries, but only four were admitted to a hospital, according to officials.

    The plane stopped in shallow waters at least 650 feet past the end of the runway, Indonesian media reported. Local TV footage showed the plane with slightly ruptured fuselage floating in the water. People in life vests were also visible in the water.

    Seven crew members and 101 passengers were aboard the plane, Sirait said.

    Multiple pictures of the crippled plane circulated on Twitter.

    "There was no sign at all it would fall but then suddenly it dropped into the water," passenger Tantri Widiastuti, 60, told Metro TV. "I saw holes in the floor of the plane ... we were evacuated quickly." 

    An investigation is under way, and the National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a team to the site.

    Reuters reported that Lion Air is a popular budget airline in Indonesia, which has a poor airline safety record.

    NBC News' Matthew DeLuca and Reuters contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published on Sat Apr 13, 2013 5:05 AM EDT

    184 comments

    Finally the first post :))))) I hate flying... I wonder if it hates me back

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  • Updated
    22
    Feb
    2013
    1:35pm, EST

    Official: Wreckage may be plane carrying fashion icon Vittorio Missoni

    Daniel Dal Zennaro / EPA, file

    Italian fashion scion Vittorio Missoni is shown in a 2009 photo from Milan, Italy. The chief of the Missoni fashion house has been missing along with five others since Jan. 4, when his plane vanished after taking off from the Los Roques resort area en route to Caracas.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Wreckage that may be remains of the missing plane carrying Italian fashion executive Vittorio Missoni and five others has been found on an island off the coast of Venezuela, an Italian official said Friday.

    "I can confirm that the wreckage of an airplane has been found off the coast, but we don't know yet whether this was the same airplane that was carrying Mr. Missoni," an Italian Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

    The wreckage was spotted along a rough stretch of unpopulated coast on the north side of the island of Curacao, said Norman Serphos, spokesman for the Curacao Public Prosecutor's Office. Because of rugged terrain and strong currents offshore, the island's coast guard was called in to assist with the recovery, which was completed Thursday afternoon, he said.

    In the past two weeks, bags belonging to Missoni have been found on the same north coast of Curacao as well as on the neighboring island of Bonaire, Serphos said.

    Venezuelan Government / AP, file

    Venezuela National Civil Aviation Institute search Jan. 9 for a plane that went missing near Los Roques, Venezuela, five days earlier carrying Vittorio Missoni, his wife and four others. Wreckage has been found, but it was unclear early Friday whether it was that of the Missoni's plane.

    He said the material recovered Thursday was in the early stages of scrutiny, and he was cautious about saying whether what was found was indeed part of an aircraft.

    "There is an investigation going on to determine with experts what kind of material it is," Serphos said. "Even if it is from an airplane, then you still have to determine if it's from that aircraft that Mr. Missoni was on. We have a lot of things to do, probably [talk to] the maker of the airplane, the owner of the airplane and [check] the registration. A lot of things have to be confirmed. ... The minute that it's determined that it's an airplane, then the department of aviation will be involved."

    The plane carrying the 58-year-old head of the major fashion house, his wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, two Italian friends and two Venezuelan pilots has been missing since Jan. 4, when it took off from the resort area of Los Roques on its way to the Venezuelan capital, Caracas.

    Minutes after the plane took off, it disappeared from radar.

    The Italian Foreign Ministry spokesman said more information about the wreckage was being eagerly awaited in Italy, where the Missoni name is iconic.

    "We got the news early this morning from our embassy there [in Venezuela]," he said. "The investigations are ongoing. We are checking whether this was the plane."

    The Missoni family has asked for privacy and the company has not issued a statement since Jan. 7, when Angela Missoni, sister of Vittorio, said the family was "moved by the affection and help we've had so far from the whole world and thankful to the authorities for their tireless search and rescue efforts."

    "We will not give up," Angela Missoni said in the statement.

    This story was originally published on Fri Feb 22, 2013 8:07 AM EST

    36 comments

    Enjoy every day, life is short .

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  • 2
    Feb
    2013
    7:33pm, EST

    Plane veers off runway in Rome, injuring 6

    Telenews / EPA

    An ATR-72 turboprop plane went off a runway in Rome on Saturday, resulting in six injuries, including two that were serious.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Romanian plane carrying 46 passengers veered off a runway during a landing at Rome’s Leonardo da Vinci airport on Saturday, injuring six passengers, an airport official told Reuters.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Two passengers suffered concussions and were transported to a hospital, the official said. The injuries were non-life threatening, a senior official told Italy’s Sky TG24-TV.

    Although the cause of the accident remains unclear, strong winds may have been the culprit, pushing the plane into the grass.

    The ATR 72 turboprop plane is owned by Romania’s Carpatair airline, based in Timisoara. Its planes leave from Romania, Moldova and Ukraine.  

    The airline operates some flights on behalf of Italian flag-carrier, Alitalia, under a contract.

    17 comments

    It looks like Alitalia livery, colors and all.

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    Explore related topics: italy, romania, plane, rome, carpatair
  • 26
    Jan
    2013
    6:01am, EST

    'Not survivable': Wreckage of missing Antarctica plane found, rescuers say

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A plane that went missing in Antarctica slammed into a mountain and there are not believed to be any survivors, rescuers said Saturday.

    Three Canadians were on board the Twin Otter aircraft when it went missing Wednesday about halfway between the South Pole and the McMurdo Station research center.

    “The aircraft wreckage is on a very steep slope, close to the summit of Mt Elizabeth. It appears to have made a direct impact that was not survivable.  No details are available on the cause of the crash,” Maritime New Zealand, which has been coordinating the search operation, said in a statement. “The next of kin have been informed.”

    It said the site of the crash was at the northern end of the Queen Alexandra mountain range at an altitude of about 13,000 feet.

    Two helicopters reached the site at around 7.15 p.m. New Zealand time (1.15 a.m. ET), but were not able to land.

    Rescuer Tracy Brickles said in the statement that it was very sad end to the operation.

    “It has been difficult operation in challenging conditions but we remained hopeful of a positive result. Our thoughts are now with the families of the crewmen,” she said.

    The Calgary Sun newspaper previously identified one of those aboard the plane as Bob Heath of the Northwest Territories, calling him a “star pilot” for Canadian firm Kenn Borek Air, which owns the plane.

    In an emailed statement, Kenn Borek Air said one of its aircraft and a New York Air National Guard plane had also made “visual contact” with the crash site.

    “No signs of activity are evident in the area surrounding the site, and it appears that the impact was not survivable,” the statement said.

    It added that helicopter crews and mountain rescue teams would attempt to get to the site.

    Related:

    Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole

    100-mph winds ground search for plane missing in Antarctica

    84 comments

    Been following this story since it unfolded down here and we were hoping that some how they survived. But seems it is no longer the case...a sad outcome for all and sympathy to the families involved in Canada...the lost are a long way from home....

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  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    7:50pm, EST

    Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole; emergency locator beacon activated

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    (Editor's note: This story includes a correction.)

    An aircraft carrying three men went missing in Antarctica on Wednesday and the plane’s emergency locator beacon was activated, according to the National Science Foundation.  


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The status of those aboard remains unknown, NSF spokesman Peter West said. The Toronto Star reported that the three men are Canadian.

    West said those aboard were likely a pilot, co-pilot and a flight engineer carrying or picking up cargo. They had been contracted to support a branch of the Italian Antarctic Program that focuses on new technology and energy – specifically nuclear fusion and fission.

    The aircraft, a de Havilland Twin Otter, was returning from the South Pole to Terra Nova Bay, where the Italian Antarctic Program is based, when contact was lost as the plane flew over a remote area of the Transantarctic Mountains.


    The plane was contracted out by Kenn Borek Air Ltd., a Canadian company based in Calgary that charters aircraft to the U.S. Antarctic program.

    Rescue crews, based at the New Zealand Rescue Coordination Center, know generally where the beacon is coming from, but cloudy and windy conditions have prevented rescue planes from attempting a landing near the downed plane.

    “There are not as many weather stations, so it’s difficult to find out what the weather is,” West said. “There was low cloud, limited visibility in the air in the area where they were looking for the aircraft -- some blowing snow and issues with cloud.”

     

    www.nsf.gov

    A Twin Otter aircraft, photographed here in 2006, at the National Science Foundation's Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.

    West said he didn’t know whether the flight crew carried cold weather survival gear. At the U.S. station, protocol demands that anyone leaving the base must have protective gear – typically a parka, wind pants, insulated boots, a tent, food and a stove to melt snow into water.

    He said that he doesn't recall a similar crash in his 14 years as a spokesman for the Antarctic program.

    Antarctica, the size of U.S. and Mexico combined, is vast, white and isolated. There are about 50 research stations, some of them year-round, others open during research season, which runs roughly between October and early February – summer in the Southern Hemisphere. During those months, the largest is McMurdo Station, the U.S. Antarctic station on Ross Island, with about 1,100 people.

    “It’s a harsh continent,” West said. “People take extra care if they can.”

    22 comments

    I worked at McMurdo for two austral summers, Oct.-Feb. in 1978-88, when flying in or out you can't imagine how big Antarctica really is, how much ice you fly over.

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  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    1:24pm, EST

    Missoni fashion house executive missing after plane disappeared off Venezuela coast

    By The Associated Press

    The search resumed Saturday for a small plane that has disappeared off the Venezuelan coast with six people aboard, including Vittorio Missoni, a top executive in Italy's Missoni fashion house, officials said.

    Daniel Dal Zennaro / EPA file

    Italian fashion executive Vittorio Missoni, son of Italian fashion designer Ottavio Missoni, is missing after a plane disappeared off the coast of Venezuela.

    Missoni, 58, is the director general of the iconic brand and the eldest son of the company's founder. Flying with him on Friday's flight from Venezuela's Los Roques resort archipelago to Caracas, was Missoni's wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, two Italian friends of the couple, and a crew of two Venezuelans.

    Italy's Corriere della Sera newspaper reported that family patriarch Ottavio Missoni, 91, and his wife, Rosita, were at their home in Italy, along with their daughter, Angela, the chief fashion designer and sister of Vittorio Missoni, waiting for information about the search. Italian news reports said the third Missoni sibling, Luca, had flown to Venezuela.

    "We have no other news" beyond that the plane went missing, Paolo Marchetti, a Missoni official told reporters as he left company headquarters in the northern Italian town of Sumirago on Saturday afternoon.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Missoni, with its trademark zigzag and other geometric patterns in sweaters, scarves and other knitwear, is one of Italy's most famous fashion brands abroad. Vittorio Missoni played a key role in marketing the Missoni family creations in Asia, especially in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea, and he took on the title of general director of marketing of Missoni SpA. He also is responsible for the company's products in the United States and France.

    His elderly parents still play an active role in the family.

    On Friday, Venezuela's Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said the plane was declared missing hours after taking off from Los Roques, a string of islands, cays and islets that is popular for scuba diving, white beaches and coral reefs, where the Missonis and their friends were on vacation.

    Revero said the plane had been expected at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Caracas but never arrived.

    A first day of searching on Friday yielded nothing.

    As the search resumed Saturday, the Italian news agency ANSA, reporting from Rome, said a specialized ocean-searching naval vessel was being deployed.

    The Missoni brand is scheduled to display its latest menswear creations on the Milan runways in fashion show later this month.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Strong young woman': Taliban shooting victim Malala leaves hospital
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    18 comments

    I hope they find this plane and everyone is alright. Whether rich or not, it is always frightening to have a loved one on a plane that goes missing. This is a sobering reminder, that life is precious and we need to appreciate our loved ones, friends, those we have in our lives, each and every day. F …

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  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    11:15am, EST

    Jet rolls off Moscow runway, splits apart

    A jet breaks into pieces after sliding off the runway at a Moscow airport. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

    By Alissa de Carbonnel, Reuters

    MOSCOW -- A Russian airliner split into pieces after it slid off the runway and crashed onto a highway outside Moscow on Saturday, killing at least four of the 12 crew on board and leaving smoking chunks of fuselage on the icy road.

    Television footage showed the Tupolev 204 jet, broken into pieces, with smoke billowing from the tail end and the cockpit broken clean off the front. 

    A man was thrown from the plane as it rammed into the barrier of the highway outside Vnukovo airport, one witness told the TV channel Rossiya-24.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Another witness described pulling other people from the wreckage.

    "The plane split into three pieces," Yelena Krylova, chief spokeswoman for the airport, said in televised comments.


    An Emergency Services spokesman said four people died of injuries after the crash and four others were in hospital. Police said 12 crew members were on board, but no passengers.

    "The plane went off the runway, broke through the barrier and caught fire," police spokesman Gennady Bogachyov said.

    The mid-range Tu-204 was operated by the Russian airline Red Wings and was traveling from the Czech Republic, Krylova said.

    Rubble from the crash was scattered across the highway and the plane's wings were torn from the fuselage, witnesses said.

    Alexander Usoltsev / AP

    Rescuers work at the site of the plane crash at Moscow's Vnukovo airport on Saturday.

    "We saw how the plane skidded off the runway ... The nose, where business class is, broke off and a man fell out," said a witness, who gave his name as Alexei. "We helped him get into a mini-bus to take him to the hospital."

    Another witness described pulling four people from the wreckage when he arrived at the scene before emergency service workers. "We could not get the pilot out of the cockpit but we saw a lot of blood," he told Rossiya-24.

    Russian investigators said preliminary findings pointed to pilot error as the cause of the crash.

    Russia and other former Soviet republics had some of the world's worst air-traffic safety records last year, with a total accident rate almost three times the world average, the International Air Transport Association said.

    A passenger jet crashed and burst into flames after takeoff in Siberia in April, killing 31 people, and an airliner slammed into a riverbank in September 2011, wiping out the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ice hockey team in a crash that killed 44 people.

    The Russian-built Tu-204, which is comparable in size to a Boeing 757 or Airbus A321, is a Soviet-era design that was produced in the mid-1990s but is no longer being made. There have no major accidents previously reported with Tu-204s.

    The crash during peak holiday travel ahead of Russia's New Year's vacation, which runs from Sunday through Jan. 9, cast a spotlight on Russia's poor air-safety record despite President Vladimir Putin's calls to improve controls. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • India gang-rape victim dies in hospital; case focused attention on sexual violence
    • Putin signs law banning American adoptions
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    • Video: William and Kate spend holiday with the Middletons
    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    163 comments

    That pretty much mirrors the country as a whole......splitting, tearing, ripping apart at the seams.

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  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    4:17am, EST

    Two die as passenger jet lands in Myanmar rice field

    Stringer / Reuters

    Soldiers stand at the crash site of a Air Bagan plane in Myanmar, Tuesday.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    YANGON, Myanmar – A passenger jet missed an airport runway in heavy fog and landed in a rice paddy, killing two people on the ground and injuring 10, state television in Myanmar said Tuesday.

    The pilot of the Air Bagan plane touched down beyond Heho airport in Shan state, killing an 11-year-old passenger and a motorcyclist on the ground, MRTV said.

    Four foreigners and the pilot were among the injured. The plane was carrying 63 passengers, 51 of whom were foreigners. MRTV said.

    Air Bagan is one of five airlines operating domestic routes in Myanmar.

    Stringer / Reuters

    People gather at the crash site of a Air Bagan plane in Myanmar, Tuesday.

    Owned by Tay Za, a local tycoon blacklisted by the United States for his alleged links to former military regime, Air Bagan was the country's first privately run carrier when it was established in 2004.

    Agence France Press (AFP) reported that the aircraft - one of two Fokker-100s in the Air Bagan fleet - was forced to make an emergency landing two miles from Heho airport, which is the gateway to the popular tourist destination of Inle Lake.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Boy's Christmas wish: Adoption of little brother caught in US-Russia spat
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    20 comments

    The Fokker 100 is the momma of all Fokkers, i.e., the "mother Fokker".

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  • 11
    Oct
    2012
    12:16pm, EDT

    Turkish PM: Syria plane was carrying Russian-made munitions

    Burhan Ozbilici / AP

    People speak from the top of the steps of a Syrian passenger plane that was forced by Turkish jets to land in Ankara, Turkey, on Thursday. Turkish jets on Wednesday forced the Syrian Air Airbus A320 passenger plane to land on suspicion that it was carrying weapons, amid heightened tensions between Turkey and Syria that have sparked fears of a wider regional conflict.

    By NBC News wire services

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday that a Syrian passenger plane forced to land in Ankara was carrying Russian-made munitions destined for Syria's defense ministry.

    Russia's ITAR-Tass news agency earlier quoted an official at the Russian Embassy in Ankara as saying that the cargo "was not of Russian origin." Rosoboronexport, which handles most of Russia's military export contracts, said none of its cargo was on the plane.

    Turkish authorities ordered the Syrian Air passenger plane that was traveling from Moscow to Damascus to land late on Wednesday after receiving an intelligence tip-off and seized some of its cargo. 


    Damascus said intercepting the Syrian Air plane was an act of piracy, further heightening tensions between the neighbors after Turkey's chief of staff warned Ankara would use greater force if shells from Syria continued to hit Turkish territory. The plane's 37 passengers and crew were allowed to continue to Damascus after several hours, without the cargo. 

    More weapons in Syria could trigger 'all-out war'

    The grounding of the plane was another sign of Ankara's growing assertiveness over the crisis in Syria.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Turkey has crossed a new threshold," said former Turkish diplomat Sinan Ulgen, chairman of the Center for Economic and Foreign Policy Studies think-tank. 

    "With the action they took last week the government is in the slightly more comfortable position of having shown it has the strength to retaliate." 

    Turkish state-run television TRT had reported that the intercepted plane was carrying military communications equipment, according to The Associated Press.

    Slideshow: The uprising in Syria

    Yeni Safak, a newspaper close to the Turkish government, also reported there were 10 containers aboard the plane, some containing radio receivers, antennas and "equipment... thought to be missile parts." 

    Neither TRT nor Yeni Safak cited sources for their reports. 

    Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had said the cargo contained "elements ... that are not legitimate in civilian flights" and insisted Ankara was within its rights to intercept the plane if it suspected that military equipment was being transported over Turkish territory. 

    NATO leaders discuss the volatile situation along the Turkish-Syrian border following last week's shelling of a village by forces loyal to Syria's government. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    Sabre rattling between Syria and its northern neighbor has increased in recent days after a spate of cross-border shell and mortar firings. Turkey, which has been vocal in its criticism of Assad's crackdown on the opposition, has beefed up its military presence along the 565-mile frontier after shelling from Syria killed five Turkish civilians in a border town last week. 

    Syrians flee across river to escape fighting

    The general manager of the Syrian Civil Aviation Agency also blasted Turkey's forced landing of the plane, calling it "contrary to regulations and aviation norms."

    Ghaidaa Abdul-Latif told reporters in Damascus that the plane's pilots were not asked to land but were instead surprised by Turkish F-16 fighter jets, which forced them to land.

    Overcome with grief, Syrian man drops to his knees holding his dead son

    "This action is contrary to the rules, because the pilot should be first asked to land for inspection," she said. "If he refuses, military jets would then fly to force him to land."

    A Syrian Airlines engineer who was aboard, Haithan Kasser, said armed Turkish officials boarded the plane and handcuffed the crew before inspecting packages that contained electrical equipment.

    Syrian plane suspected of carrying weapons forced to land in Turkey

    Abdul-Latif said the officials seized some packages after presenting official documents.

    Andrea Mitchell talks to Ambassador Dennis Ross about the escalating tensions between Syria and Turkey, and what both presidential candidates are saying they'll do about the situation.

    She said Syria would file a complaint with international aviation authorities.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report. 

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    78 comments

    Yeni Safak, a newspaper close to the Turkish government, also reported there were 10 containers aboard the plane, some containing radio receivers, antennas and "equipment... thought to be missile parts." This makes the headlines of Syria plane was carrying Russian-made munitions

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  • 10
    Oct
    2012
    3:38pm, EDT

    Syrian plane suspected of carrying weapons forced to land in Turkey

    EPA/Cem Oksuz/Anadolu Agency

    A Syrian passenger plane is seen after it was forced to land at Ankara airport in Turkey, on Wednesday. The plane was headed to Damascus from Moscow with 35 passengers on board, according to Turkish media.

    By NBC News wire services

    Updated at 4:30 p.m. ET -- Turkey forced a Syrian passenger plane en route from Moscow to Damascus to land in Ankara on Wednesday on suspicion that it was carrying military equipment destined for Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces, Turkey's foreign minister said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Turkish fighter planes escorted the Syrian plane, which was carrying around 30 passengers, into the airport in Ankara after Turkish authorities received information that it was carrying "non-civilian" cargo that had not been registered.

    More weapons in Syria could trigger 'all-out war'

    "We are determined to control weapons transfers to a regime that carries out such brutal massacres against civilians. It is unacceptable that such a transfer is made using our airspace," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said.

    "Today we received information that this plane was carrying cargo of a nature that could not possibly be in compliance with the rules of civil aviation," he said on Turkish television.

    NATO leaders discuss the volatile situation along the Turkish-Syrian border following last week's shelling of a village by forces loyal to Syria's government. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.



    Tensions between Turkey and Syria, once close allies, have become increasingly strained during the rebellion in Syria against Assad.

    Davutoglu said Turkey was within its rights to investigate planes suspected to be carrying military materials and that the plane would be allowed to continue if it was found to be clean. He declined to comment on what the banned materials might be.

    He said Turkey would continue to investigate Syrian civilian aircraft using its airspace.

    He also said Syrian air space was no longer safe and that Turkish passenger planes should not fly there. A Reuters witness at the border saw at least one passenger plane turn around as it approached Syria and head back into Turkey on Wednesday.

    Turkey's armed forces have bolstered their presence along the 560-mile border and have been firing back over the past week in response to gunfire and shelling coming from northern Syria, where Assad's forces have been battling rebels who control swathes of territory.

    The Syrian government has made heavy use of air power and artillery to halt rebel advances in the conflict, now in its 19th month.

    Syrians flee across river to escape fighting

    Five Turkish civilians were killed by Syrian mortar fire last week.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    82 comments

    Wow, the polarization in America has gotten so bad that most comments don't even address the particular news story anymore. Where is an update to this story? The plane was forced to land hours ago. Was it carrying weapons or not?

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