Papua New Guinean officials were Friday trying to piece together how a passenger plane crashed in a dense forest, killing 28 people – but leaving four survivors – in the nation’s worst air disaster. The survivors were the Australian and New Zealand pilots, a flight attendant, and a passenger believed to be a Chinese national, who reportedly escaped the fiery wreckage through a crack in the fuselage.
The Airlines PNG flight from the mountain gateway city of Lae to Madang, believed to be carrying parents travelling to see their children ahead of their university graduation, went down on Thursday as a heavy storm closed in. “We had 32 people on board. Four survived and the rest sustained fatal injuries in the crash,” the head of Papua New Guinea’s Accident Investigation Commission David Inau told AFP via telephone.
“This will be the worst (crash) in terms of fatalities. This is the biggest, the highest fatality figures we’ve had.”
Papua New Guinea authorities said the weather had been poor when the Bombardier Dash 8 aircraft came down in dense forest near the mouth of the Gogol River, about 20 kilometres (13 miles) from its destination.
But they were unable to confirm whether the storm caused the crash.
“There was some weather in the area and that’s normal for Papua New Guinea in the afternoons, you do have thunderstorms and heavy rain,” Inau said.