Plane Crashes in Afghanistan| Crashed Aircraft Not Linked to India, Clarification Issued| Oneindia

  • 9 months ago
A recent aviation incident in Afghanistan involving a plane crash prompted clarifications from the Indian government. Contrary to initial reports suggesting the crashed plane was flying from Delhi to Moscow, the Civil Aviation Ministry clarified that it was a Moroccan-registered small aircraft, emphasizing that it was not Indian.

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Transcript
00:00 In a recent aviation incident, initial reports indicating that a plane crashed in Afghanistan
00:06 believed to be flying from Delhi to Moscow prompted clarifications from the Indian government.
00:12 The Civil Aviation Ministry stated that the crashed aircraft was not Indian, instead it
00:18 was a Moroccan-registered small plane.
00:20 The exact details were awaited, emphasizing that it wasn't an Indian-scheduled or non-scheduled
00:26 NSOP or charter aircraft.
00:29 Russian aviation authorities, on the other hand, shared additional information, noting
00:33 that a Russian-registered plane presumed to be carrying six individuals disappeared from
00:38 radar screens over Afghanistan.
00:41 The aircraft, a charter ambulance flight, was reportedly travelling from India to Moscow
00:47 via Uzbekistan on a French-made Dassault Falcon 10 jet manufactured in 1978.
00:54 The crash occurred in Badakhshan province, which shares borders with China, Tajikistan
01:00 and Pakistan.
01:01 Zabihullah Amiri, the head of the provincial information department, confirmed the crash
01:06 but mentioned that the exact location is still unknown.
01:10 Despite sending teams, no further details were provided, with Amiri explaining that
01:15 the information was received from local residents in the morning.
01:19 The province where the crash occurred, Badakhshan, is known for the Hindukush mountain range,
01:24 which includes Afghanistan's highest mountain, Mount Noshaq, standing at 7,492 metres.
01:32 Russian officials reported that the compact chartered jet vanished from radar screens
01:37 over Afghanistan on Saturday evening following preliminary data that indicated six individuals
01:43 on board, comprising four crew members and two passengers.
01:59 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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