“PIA [Flight PK-661] aircraft ATR-42 (AP-BHO) crashed near Havelian at 1642 hours, 42 passengers, five crew members and one ground engineer were on board,” PIA spokesperson said in a statement. The crash site is near a small village called Saddha Batolni, the spokesperson added.
"There are no survivors, no one has survived," Muhammad Azam Saigol told a press conference late on Wednesday.
Saigol said the ATR-42 aircraft had undergone regular maintenance and had in October passed an "A-check" certification, conducted after every 500 hours of flight operations. "I think that there was no technical error or human error ... obviously there will be a proper investigation," he said.
https://twitter.com/AirportPakistan/status/806515282063675393
An earlier airline statement said the ATR-42 turboprop aircraft had lost contact.
A PIA aircraft has lost contact with control tower. Plz see statement below. pic.twitter.com/AVcNXFL6E2
— Cultural Maverick (@CulturalMaverik) December 7, 2016
Major air crashes in Pakistan
Among those on board was Junaid Jamshed, a former pop star turned evangelical Muslim, according to the Chitral airport manager, a local police official and the flight’s passengers list.
Two Austrians and one Chinese were also among those on board PK-616, according to the airline website.
In his last tweet, Jamshed posted pictures of a snow-capped mountain, calling Chitral "Heaven on Earth".
Heaven on Earth Chitral.
— Junaid Jamshed (@JunaidJamshedPK) December 4, 2016
With my friends in the Path of Allah . Snowpacked Tirchmir right behind us pic.twitter.com/ZajcWEKlrG
Before boarding the flight, Jamshed along with former cricketer Saeed Anwar met officers at the Chitral Scouts Officers Mess.
He was in Chitral with his wife on a 15-day preaching trip, known as 'Masturat Jamaat. The jamaat comprised four couples from Rawalpindi and Islamabad.
Profile: The enigma that was Junaid Jamshed
'40 bodies recovered so far'
The military's media wing ISPR said at least 40 bodies were recovered, while the rescue operation continued.
“500 army troops, including doctors and paramedics, along with necessary vehicles, ambulances taking part in rescue operation,” the statement said.
All burnt bodies were shifted to Ayub Medical Teaching Hospital Abbottabad, according to PDMA Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.
Junaid was on seat 27C #pk661 #JunaidJamshed pic.twitter.com/DkUKg32DGT
— Fakhr-e-Alam S.I & S.E (@falamb3) December 7, 2016
Rescue efforts so far
-National Emergency Operation Centre has been established for coordination with the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The centre can be contacted at 051-9205037
-NDMA has directed the District Administrator to shift all deceased to a single hospital for recognition and their transportation to native areas
-Interior ministry has placed all of its helicopters at the disposal of NDMA to evacuate bodies
-Chairman NADRA has sent on field the biometric teams for recognition purpose
PIA PK-661 crash: List of passengers on board
- A facilitation centre has been established by DCO Abbotabad
'ATR aircraft was 10-years-old'
PIA spokesperson told Express News that the ATR-42 aircraft which was "nearly 10 years old" was "in good condition".
Meanwhile, the ATR aircraft company extended to sympathies towards the families of the victims who died in the plane crash today. A press statement released by the company said it regrets the tragic accident.
‘No technical issue before takeoff’
Senior Technician PIA Mohammad Ayub said the crashed plane was checked before it took off from Chitral.“There was no technical issue… had been cleared by the aircraft engineer, Asim Waqas, who is also one of the victims. Yesterday, it had flown to Kabul as well,” he told The Express Tribune.
“The pilot, who was in touch with us said one of the engines had stopped working. His last words were Mayday,” Ayub added.
Crew members
In 2012, a passenger aircraft had crashed near Islamabad while trying to land during a thunderstorm, killing all 127 people on board. The Bhoja Air flight B-213 from Karachi burst into flames after coming down in fields near a village on the outskirts of the capital as it tried to land in rain and hail at the city’s international airport.
In 2010, an Air Blue flight ED-202 from Karachi had crashed into Margalla Hills near the capital with 152 people on board.
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