Air Crash In Greece

Merlin the Magician

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ATHENS (Reuters) - A Cypriot airliner carrying 121 people crashed north of Athens on Sunday after losing contact with air traffic control minutes before it went down.

A Greek police spokeswoman said there were no immediate reports of survivors.

Two Greek F-16 fighter jets were scrambled after the Helios Airways jet, en route from Larnaca in Cyprus to Prague via Athens, lost contact with the control tower at Athens international airport.

One of the F-16 pilots reported that he could not see the captain in the cockpit and his co-pilot appeared to be slumped in his seat, a Defence Ministry official told Reuters.

"I saw the plane coming. I knew it was serious or that it was some kind of VIP because I saw the two fighter jets," said witness Dimitris Karezas, who owns a summer camp in the area.

"Two, three minutes later I heard a big bang and ever since I've started looking for it, but I have not found anything yet," he told reporters.

The plane was carrying 115 passengers and six crew.

Ambulances and firefighters went to the crash site, uninhabited mountainous bushland in the Grammatiko area about 40 km (25 miles) north of Athens. Wreckage was spread over a wide area and fire had broken out.

"There is a fire, lots of debris. We're trying to extinguish the fire," regional fire brigade commander Nikos Papamichos told Reuters from the site. "I can't say anything more," he said when asked if there were any survivors.

A witness told state television: "From the way it looks it doesn't seem like there should be survivors."

Military helicopters flying overhead reported debris and smoke but no movement on the ground.

Greek TV station Alpha reported that the pilot had sent a message to air traffic controllers saying the plane had a problem with its air conditioning, after which all communication was cut.

As the extent of the disaster became clear, Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis broke off his holiday on the Greek island of Tinos to rush back to Athens.

Several witnesses said they saw the plane flying low over Athens' eastern coastline before disappearing out of sight and seconds later they heard a crash.

"I never saw it slowing down," one witness said on television.

Helios, Cyprus's first private carrier, established in 1999, flies to Dublin, Sofia, Warsaw, Prague, Strasbourg and several British airports using a fleet of Boeing B737 aircraft.
 
Just watching the news now - its sounds terrible - no survivors at all. Sounds like the oxygen supply was faulty, the pilots became unconscious as did many of the passengers, although there have been reports that they rapidly died of hypothermia. I just hope they weren't conscious when they crashed.

After watching the new cult US show "Lost" on Thursday - it makes you realise just how wrong they got it. Programme was laughable (perhaps its supposed to be?) - but polar bears on a tropical island?!
 
After watching the new cult US show "Lost" on Thursday - it makes you realise just how wrong they got it. Programme was laughable (perhaps its supposed to be?) - but polar bears on a tropical island?!

It's a drama with distinct elements of fantasy/mystery - the polar bears are just one of the many, many strange things about the island.
 
Originally posted by jinnyj@Aug 14 2005, 06:42 PM
Programme was laughable (perhaps its supposed to be?) - but polar bears on a tropical island?!
They must be lost <_<
 
It was reported that one of the poor souls on board texted a farewell message, saying 'we are all very cold - our pilot is blue' - I don't know how he'd know, unless someone went to the cockpit and found the pilot out of commission. I wonder if the freon went wrong and more or less froze everyone? Dreadful scenes of people crazed with grief at the airport - I'm not sure that it isn't too intrusive to show such things.
 
Awful news and I can't begin to imagine how their relatives must feel. And I must agree with Krizon about the television scenes showing relatives at the airport. Its something I've always felt very uncomfortable about, people at their most desperate being turned into photographic subjects, merely for television and newspapers. It must be a terrible terrible time for these people and they should be allowed to grieve away from the glare of a camera lens.
 
Separately, police arrested Nektarios-Sotirios Voutas for spreading false information after claiming that his cousin sent him a text message saying that the pilots had turned blue and all the passengers were freezing.

Police now say a widely reported text message describing freezing conditions onboard and a "blue" pilot was a hoax.

The alleged message had made headlines in the international media.

Some really STRANGE PEOPLE ABOUT WHY WOULD SOMEONE WANT TO DO THIS?????? :rolleyes:
 
That's just disgusting, isn't it, Merlin? These wretched people should be put in jail for a year, if only on the grounds of extreme poor taste.
 
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