Pakistani plane crash: Seventeen killed including two pilots after military aircraft crashes near Islamabad

Pakistan army officials examine the site of a plane crash in Rawalpindi
AP
Stephanie Cockroft30 July 2019

Seventeen people including two pilots have died after a small Pakistani military plane crashed into a city close to Islamabad.

The crash took place in Mora Kalu village, near the garrison city of Rawalpindi, just before dawn on Tuesday, officials said.

Fires, damaged homes and debris were visible as troops and police cordoned off the residential area to search for plane debris and scour the area for clues as to what caused the crash.

Five soldiers, including two army pilots, and at least 12 civilians were killed, the military said in a statement.

Farooq Butt, an official at the state-run emergency service, said an additional 15 people were injured. Rescue officials said the death toll could rise since some of those injured were critical.

Pakistan army officials examine the site of a plane crash in Rawalpindi
AP

"We have shifted all the bodies and injured persons to hospitals," he said. "Most of the victims received burn injuries and children are among the dead."

Residents say they woke up when they heard an explosion and saw debris of a burning plane near their homes. Army helicopters were seen hovering over the crash site later.

"My sister, her husband and their three children were killed when the plane crashed into their home," said Mohammad Mustafa, as he sobbed near his sister's badly damaged home.

He said rescuers and troops quickly reached the area after the crash.

Military personnel work at the scene where a Pakistani Army Aviation Corps aircraft crashed in Rawalpindi
AFP/Getty Images

Abdul Rehman, a medical doctor, said at least three homes were badly damaged and the pilots' bodies had been retrieved.

The military said the army aircraft was on a routine training flight when it crashed, but had no information on the possible cause.

Pakistan's military has been on maximum alert since February when India launched an airstrike inside Pakistan, saying it was targeting militants who were responsible for the suicide bombing that killed 40 Indian troops in Indian-administered Kashmir.

Pakistan at the time retaliated and shot down two Indian air force planes. One Indian pilot was captured and later released amid signs of easing tensions.

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