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Cuba Plane Crash: AeroCaribbean Flight Goes Down With 68 Aboard

JAVIER GALEANO and PAUL HAVEN   11/ 5/10 10:51 PM ET   AP

Cuba Plane Crash Aerocaribbean
Flames emerge from the wreckage of a Cuban airliner as Police officers and residents look on after it crashed near the village of Guasimal in Santi Spiritus province, Cuba, Thursday Nov. 4, 2010. AeroCaribbean Flight 883 flying from the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba to the capital crashed after declaring an emergency Thursday evening with 68 people aboard, including 28 foreigners, state media reported. There was no immediate word on whether any survived. (AP Photo/Escambray, Prensa Latina)

GUASIMAL, Cuba — Rescue workers on Friday pulled bodies from the charred wreckage of a state airliner that went down in rugged central Cuba, as desperate relatives gathered at the capital's airport and called foreign embassies seeking information on their loved ones.

All 68 people aboard AeroCaribbean Flight 883 were killed when the turboprop plane went down Thursday afternoon in a remote area near the village of Guasimal in Sancti Spiritus province.

Twenty-eight foreigners were among the dead, including nine Argentines, seven Mexicans, and citizens of Germany, Holland, Spain, Italy and other European countries. One Japanese national was also on board. It was Cuba's worst air disaster in more than 20 years.

The plane, carrying 61 passengers and an all-Cuban crew of seven, was en route to the capital from the main eastern city of Santiago de Cuba when it reported an emergency at 5:42 p.m. and later crashed in flames.

Cuban state media showed footage of rescue workers and military personnel poring over the crash site in the evening hours while firefighters sprayed the smoldering wreckage. Bodies of the victims were being brought to the medical examiner's office in Havana for identification, and a commission was formed to determine the cause of the crash.

"All of the bodies are burned, except for two that were in the back of the plane," chief investigator Rolando Diaz Vergal told local state-run newspaper Escambray. "It seems that the passengers had no time to react because the burned bodies are still in their own seats, which has helped us with the identifications."

Vergal said the crash site smelled of death and some body parts were thrown up into the branches of nearby vegetation.

State media reported that rescuers had found the plane's flight data recorders, a key step in possibly determining the cause of the crash.

Javier Figueroa, an official at the Argentine Embassy in Havana, said the mission was inundated with calls from worried relatives in his country. President Cristina Fernandez was readying a plane to ferry family members of the victims to Cuba, but it was not clear when it would arrive.

"We have been in contact with the (Cuban) Foreign Ministry and Civil Aviation about the rescue efforts, which are being made more difficult because of the area's rugged conditions," Figueroa said. "That is making identifications more complicated."

Figueroa said the Argentines on board appeared to be tourists – not residents – and they were not part of a single tour group.

Mexico's foreign ministry said embassy personnel in Cuba were on their way to the crash site, and would work with Cuban officials to help identify victims. It said consular officials were helping relatives of the victims. Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero sent a letter of condolence to Cuban leader Raul Castro, and promised his country's help.

At Havana's national terminal, relatives were isolated from travelers and journalists. One distraught man told The Associated Press he lost three cousins aboard the plane, but would not give his name and was quickly ushered away by airport officials.

In Toulouse, France, aircraft manufacturer ATR said the plane was built in 1995 and became part of AeroCaribbean's fleet in October 2006. It had logged 25,000 hours of flying time during more than 34,500 flights.

"At this time, the reasons for the accident are still unknown," the company said, adding that it was ready to "provide full technical assistance" to Cuban and French aviation officials.

"ATR expresses its deepest sympathy to the families, friends and loved ones affected by the accident," the company said.

In Guasimal, about 220 miles (350 kilometers) east of Havana, emergency vehicles lined a road about 2 miles (3 kilometers) from the crash site, and journalists were not permitted to get any closer.

Photos posted on the website of the local newspaper, Escambray, showed a large piece of the plane in flames, with rescue workers in olive-green military uniforms standing around it. Others showed rescue workers using a bulldozer to reach the remote site.

Another picture showed the AeroCaribbean plane in happier times, painted white, yellow and blue, and adorned with images of bending palm trees.

The twice-a-week AeroCaribbean flight goes from Port-au-Prince, Haiti, to Santiago de Cuba to Havana.

Cuban media was quick to release the passenger manifest, but details on the crash itself were hard to come by in a country whose press is tightly controlled.

A state television newscast hours after the crash led with news of an American ballet company's visit to Cuba, then reported on a Transportation Ministry decree that said travelers would be reimbursed or rescheduled if their trips were interrupted by tropical weather in eastern Cuba.

The announcers made no mention of the crash until they read a short statement toward the end of the broadcast.

The flight would have been one of the last leaving Santiago de Cuba for Havana ahead of Hurricane Tomas, which had not yet reached Cuba when the plane went down.

AeroCaribbean is owned by Cuban state airline Cubana de Aviacion.

The crash is the deadliest in Cuba since a chartered Cubana de Aviacion plane en route from Havana to Milan, Italy, went down shortly after takeoff in September 1989, killing all 126 people on board, as well as 24 people on the ground.

___

Associated Press writer Paul Haven reported from Havana, Javier Galeano from Guasimal. Reporter Jenny Barchfield contributed from Paris.

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GUASIMAL, Cuba — Rescue workers on Friday pulled bodies from the charred wreckage of a state airliner that went down in rugged central Cuba, as desperate relatives gathered at the capital's airp...
GUASIMAL, Cuba — Rescue workers on Friday pulled bodies from the charred wreckage of a state airliner that went down in rugged central Cuba, as desperate relatives gathered at the capital's airp...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
02:31 PM on 11/05/2010
This is just a horribly sad story for everyone. Quite a multi-cultural disaster...
01:30 PM on 11/05/2010
The Escambray paper in the region is really up date including names of passengers...

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Escambray/205692256170#!/notes/escambray/relacion-de-fallecidos-en-el-accidente-de-la-aeronave-atr-72-212/459342963325
01:25 PM on 11/05/2010
More cut rate airplanes with cheap labor to save on costs. Wonderful. Soon all airlines will fly from overseas to reduce the liability of major airlines.
07:12 PM on 11/05/2010
As someone who has flown with this airline and on this model aeroplane I say I felt like they knew what they were doing. Turboprops are good aeroplanes to use over short distances. I liked it.
12:14 PM on 11/05/2010
Just last year I took a plane of that exact same model of that same airline in Cuba.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Stewart
10:30 AM on 11/05/2010
Do we know where Luis Posada Carriles was at the time?

Luis Posada Carriles, nicknamed Bambi to friends, is a former Central Intelligence Agency agent, convicted of involvement in various terrorist attacks and plots in the Western hemisphere, including:

-- involvement in the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed seventy-three people

-- the admitted involvement in a string of bombings in 1997 targeting fashionable Cuban hotels and nightspots

-- he was convicted of an assassination attempt on Fidel Castro in Panama in 2000 (although he was later pardoned by Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso in the final days of her term – at the insistence of the US).

He currently lives openly in Miami.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cartunes
11:15 AM on 11/05/2010
why dont you move to Cuba and find out who the real terrorist are, the ones who have been terrorizing 12,000,000 people and all of south america for 50 years. plus 3,000,000 in exile !!!!!!!!!!!!
01:13 PM on 11/05/2010
Just move to miami.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Stewart
02:38 PM on 11/05/2010
Sorry pal. You'll get few to buy that terrorism (blowing up innocent people) is a justifiable solution to an unpopular government in Cuba. Posada should be in prison, and you are an extremist terrorist sympathizer who should be deported from the country -- your opinion is very unAmerican.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:09 AM on 11/05/2010
I wonder if the US is responsible for sabotaging the plane and that caused the crash. It is the sort of thing the US has been doing in Cuba for fifty years.

http://killinghope.org/bblum6/cuba.htm
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Stewart
10:31 AM on 11/05/2010
Do we know where Luis Posada Carriles was at the time?

Last tiem a Cuban Airliner went down Luis Posada Carriles blew it up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cartunes
11:18 AM on 11/05/2010
why dont you move to Cuba and find out who the real terrorist are, the ones who have been terrorizing 12,000,000 people and all of south america for 50 years. plus 3,000,000 in exile !!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
02:56 PM on 11/05/2010
Ooh, someone has excellent cutting and pasting skills.

The U.S has a documented history of terrorism both in Cuba and the rest of Latin America. You can deny that all you want, but history says you're wrong. And a liar.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arrech
NY, NY
09:53 AM on 11/05/2010
My condolences to all victim's families.
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07:57 AM on 11/05/2010
Any day now global airline conglomerates...you'll stop trapping people on flying coffins and give them a way to immediately eject their seat through the floor where a parachute will automatically deploy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arrech
NY, NY
09:51 AM on 11/05/2010
And drop you in shark infested waters.
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graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
07:44 AM on 11/05/2010
Cuba has planes?
08:46 AM on 11/05/2010
Are you trying to be funny?
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
10:08 AM on 11/05/2010
Yes, but they were all built in the 1950's like their cars.
12:50 PM on 11/05/2010
American Eagle Flight 4184.
01:11 PM on 11/05/2010
Hey, if they have a 55 or 57 Chevy in nice shape perhaps they'd trade me for it.
06:49 AM on 11/05/2010
Sad and a shame. Blessings to the families to those were lost. What is even more disturbing is that Cuba has very antiquated equipment, parts, and service lines due to not only the Embargo, yet pressure on other countries to cross that line with the Embargo. With all the debt and goods we are borrowing from "Communist China", makes you wonder some time the real relevance of this.
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Bytown
One way or the other!!
09:07 AM on 11/05/2010
Sorry but you have no idea what you're talking about.
France, Canada, Brazil and Russia all make planes, supply parts and service. And guess what? They all deal with Cuba.
The US embargo is just something that sells newspapers in the US and buys votes in Florida.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cartunes
11:26 AM on 11/05/2010
Embargo ? you naive people always believe what the countries that offer no free press, no freedom of speech , no freedom what so ever. Does are the people you truly believe, what a shame !!!!!!!!!!! Plus for all you believers in the embargo the embargo is only with the USA and its on luxuries it doesn't included medical, food, or espiritual trade !!!!!!!!!!!
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Whinger
I'm Just Me!
05:25 AM on 11/05/2010
Tragic and sad beyond words....

Sincere condolences to their family and friends.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MedinaM
04:03 AM on 11/05/2010
So heartbreaking...two plane crashes in one night (this one and the Pakistani plane)? Absolutely tragic.
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basenji
Dog lover
02:26 AM on 11/05/2010
Why worry about safety? What choice do they have? Focus on increasing the bottom line with an eye to higher bonuses.
05:29 AM on 11/05/2010
Yes, outsource maintenance and privatize air traffic control.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:25 AM on 11/05/2010
You do realize that the plane that crashed was Cuban and state-owned traveling from one Cuban city to another, right? So all air traffic control involved were Cuban state employees.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johndpieper
I dance the skies on laughter-silvered wings
02:14 AM on 11/05/2010
As a professional aviator who consistently has around 200 souls sitting behind me at work, I hate to see things like this happen. We always learn valuable information in incidents like this and others that make flying even safer than it was before the incident. The lives lost in these tragedies are never lost in vain. It's difficult for the families to understand that now, but it should eventually comfort them to know that future losses can be mitigated by the information learned in these accidents.

My thoughts a prayers are with family and friends of this crew, and the passengers. When I lost a very close friend, my cousin sent me a copy of a poem by Shel Silverstein that made me think of what my friend could say to comfort me. I'll post it here:

The Bridge
`
This bridge will only take you halfway there
To those mysterious lands you long to see:
Through gypsy camps and swirling Arab fairs
And moonlit woods where unicorns run free.
So come and walk awhile with me and share
The twisting trails and wondrous worlds I've known.
But this bridge will only take you halfway there-
The last few steps you'll have to take alone.
`
May they all rest in peace now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Williams
12:53 PM on 11/05/2010
Thank you, John for a bit of reality. Be safe.
02:09 AM on 11/05/2010
Wonder if this is the work of the Cubana 455 bombers? Its a great world we have when:

Terrorists who are alleged (not convicted) to have attacked the US are kept in cells in Cuba.

Terrorists who were convicted (not just alleged) for attacking Cuba are kept in condo's in Miami.
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NoirTulips
sweetie darling
08:55 AM on 11/05/2010
Luis Posada Carriles is one of the terrorist that gets to live free in Miami.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JavaJuice
11:30 AM on 11/05/2010
How many other terrorists are there and what are their names?