Only three
survivors, all women listed in critical condition at a Havana hospital, were
pulled from the crash site in an agricultural area close to the airport. A
fourth person who survived the initial crash reportedly died at the hospital.
The flight
was carrying 105 passengers and nine crew members, officials said. Authorities
had not yet released the names or nationalities of those on board.
Earlier,
authorities had reported that the plane carried a total of 104 or 105 people,
but officials later updated the total to 114. At least five passengers on board
were minors, including an infant, authorities said.Officials were trying to
identify the bodies after having extinguished fires at the crash site, Cuban
President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on national television.
The president
offered condolences to the victims and said that response to the crash had been
"immediate." A special commission would investigate the incident, he
said.
Casualties
were confined to those in the plane and no injuries were reported on the ground
in the agricultural district of Boyeros, where the aircraft went down.
There was no
immediate word on the cause of the crash.
The official
news outlet Granma reported that all but 11 people on board the jetliner were
Cuban nationals, but it did not identify the nationalities of the foreigners.
The flight
was on a domestic route from Havana, the capital, to the eastern city of
Holguin.
The jet was
leased by Cuba's national air carrier, Cubana Airlines, from a Mexican air
charter company known as Global Air, authorities said.
Video from
the scene showed smoke billowing from the crash site and emergency crews
wheeling a victim to an ambulance and dousing flames emanating from the
wreckage.
Friday's
crash appeared to have been the deadliest in Cuban aviation history since 1989,
when an Italy-bound charter crashed after takeoff from Havana, killing all 126
on board and others on the ground.
A
Spanish-language tweet by BuzzFeed News Mexico included video from Cuban state
television showing a plume of smoke moments after the crash. The tweet said the
plane was from the Mexican company Damojh and is operated by Cubana.Relatives
and friends of passengers on Friday's ill-fated flight also hastened to the
scene, but authorities diverted them to an aviation school where relatives were
congregating, according to news reports.
The crash
occurred at 12:08 p.m. local time, Cuban media reported.
Mexican
transport officials confirmed Friday that the jet belonged to Damojh Airlines,
which was founded in Mexico in 1990 and also operates under the name Global
Air. The airline has three 737 jets. The one that crashed Friday was
manufactured in 1979 and was leased by Cubana Airlines, Mexican authorities
said.
The Mexican
Embassy in Havana activated telephone lines and other emergency protocols, but
there was no official word on whether any Mexican citizens were on board the
plane. Cuba is a popular vacation destination for Mexicans.
Cubana
Airlines is a frequent target of criticism from Cuban citizens and other
travelers complaining about late flights and cancellations.In recent months,
the Associated Press reported, Cubana has taken many of its aging planes out of
service because of mechanical problems that the company blames on a lack of
parts and airplanes stemming from the U.S. trade embargo on the Communist-run island.
The crash
Friday was Cuba's third major fatal accident since 2010, according to AP.
Last year, a
Cuban military plane crashed into a hillside in the western province of
Artemisa, killing eight troops on board.
In November
2010, an Aero Caribbean flight from the eastern city of Santiago to Havana went
down in bad weather as it flew over central Cuba, killing all 68 people on
board, including 28 foreigners, in what was Cuba's worst air disaster in more
than two decades.
The last
Cubana Airlines accident, AP said, appears to have been on Sept. 4, 1989, when
a chartered Cubana plane flying from Havana to Milan, Italy, went down shortly
after takeoff, killing all 126 people on board, as well as at least two dozen
on the ground.
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