Death toll climbs to 23 from Ukraine military plane crash
The death toll climbed to 23 on Saturday from the
crash of a Ukrainian air force plane carrying mostly cadets in the east of the
country, emergency services said.
The Antonov-26 transport plane was carrying 20
cadets and seven crew when it crashed late Friday two kilometres (about one
mile) from the Chuguiv military air base near the city of Kharkiv.
One more body was found under the charred remains of
the plane early Saturday, the emergency services said, bringing the number of
victims to 23. Two people were also injured.
"The search for two more people
continues," the services said in a statement.
The cause of the crash is being investigated.
Ukraine's SBU security service said it was a
training flight but the cadets of the Kharkiv National Air Force University
were not involved in piloting the plane.
It said in a statement that according to the initial
information the officer who was piloting reported the failure of one of the
engines, and seven minutes later the plane hit the ground.
Ukraine's Defence Minister Andriy Taran said
"the plane likely caught the ground with its wing" and caught fire
after that.
"The flight recorder is now in the plane, after
analysing the information that is recorded there, it will be possible to draw
conclusions," the defence ministry quoted Taran as saying.
The body of the plane burst into flames on landing
and firefighters were able to extinguish the blaze after an hour.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who earlier
described the crash as a "terrible tragedy", is due in the Kharkiv
region on Saturday.
The region, which borders Russia in the northeast,
has declared Saturday a day of mourning.
Many grieving Ukrainians mourned the victims of the
tragedy on social media.
"We send our heartfelt condolences to the
families and loved ones of the cadets, officers, and crew killed and injured in
the An-26 plane crash," US embassy in Ukraine wrote on Facebook.



