Black box of crashed Russian military plane found
2016-12-28
SOCHI: Russian rescuers working round the clock have found the main black box from the Syria-bound military plane that crashed into the Black Sea with 92 people on board, authorities said on Tuesday.
The defence ministry said the box, which could provide vital clues as to why the Tu-154 jet crashed, was discovered on early Tuesday only 1,600 metres from the shore and 17 metres under the surface and was in `satisfactory condition`.
Investigators were also looking at a witness video of the abortive flight and the plane`s plunge into the sea.
Investigators said they have sorted and documented thousands of passengers` personal items and identification documents, questioned locals and are checking the fuel equipment at the airport.
One witness `filmed the take-off, flight and fall of the plane into the sea,` the Investigative Committee said in a statement.
The discovery of the black box comes as searchers scramble to recover bodies and remaining debris from the aircraft in an operationinvolving divers, deep-water machines, helicopters and drones.
The defence ministry said that five plane fragments, including part of the fuselage and engine, were found overnight 30 metres underwater at around 1,700 metres from the shore.
Searchers later found an additional three fragments, including landing gear and a portion of the engine, the ministry said.
The defence ministry said a total of 12 bodies and 156 body fragments had been recovered from the sea since the crash, all of which are being sent to Moscow for DNA identification.
The Kommersant daily newspaper reported that investigators are relying on a witness statement by a coastguard member who saw the plane in its final moments descending towards the sea with its nose tilted sharply upward.
Authorities have not said how long it would take to decipher the black box.
Choir to be restored Onboard were 64 members of the Alexandrov Ensemble the army`s official musical group, also 1(nown asthe Red Army Choir and their conductor Valery Khalilov.
The choir was set to perform for Russian troops at the Hmeimim airbase in Syria, which has been used to launch air strikes in support of Moscow`s ally President Bashar alAssad.
Defence minister Sergei Sholgu has pledged to restore the choir `in the nearest future`. Other passengers included military officers, journalists and popular charity worker Yelizaveta Glinka, affectionately known as `Doctor Liza`, who was bringing medical supplies to a hospital in the coastal Syrian city of Latakia.
Russia observed a day of mourning on Monday and Sochi`s administration announced on Tuesday that it is cancelling the New Year`s Eve celebration on its main square due to the tragedy.
People have been bringing flowers to improvised memorials at the port in central Sochi and the city`s airport, as well as to the Moscow headquarters of the Red Army Choir and the office of Fair Aid, the NGO that Glinka headed, which primarily worl(ed with Moscow`s homeless.-AFP