Plane wreckage, no survivors, found in Nepal

A Nepalese man consoles a relative, center, of a passenger of a missing DeHavilland Canada-manufactured Twin Otter plane outside Tribhuwan Domestic Airport in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday, Feb. 16, 2014. A Nepal Airlines plane flying in bad weather with 18 people on board was missing Sunday and is feared to have crashed in Nepal's mountainous west, officials said. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha)

KATMANDU, Nepal  — Rescuers on Monday found the wreckage of a passenger plane that slammed into the side of a snow-covered mountain in Nepal, killing all 18 people on board, including a small child, authorities said.

Moving slowly on foot through thick snow, rescuers pulled out 13 bodies from the crash site and were scouring the area for the remains of the others, said police official Bam Bahadur Bhandari.

A helicopter was able to spot the wreckage on a mountainside near Machinelek, about 250 kilometers (160 miles) west of the capital, Katmandu, a day after the Nepal Airlines Twin Otter lost contact in bad weather.

The plane was flying from Katmandu to Jumla, about 400 kilometers (250 miles) to the west, when it made an unscheduled fuel stop in the city of Pokhara, about a third of the way into the journey. Visibility was poor because of the snow, rain and fog, Bhandari said.

Bhandari said the remote area was covered by snow and it took rescuers several hours to reach there by foot from the nearest town 13 kilometers (8 miles) away.

Police and soldiers were trying to dig a temporary helipad for rescue helicopters to land.

The de Havilland Canada-manufactured aircraft had 15 passengers and three crew members on board. One of the passengers was believed to be a Danish national, while the rest on board, including an infant, were Nepalese. The plane was 43 years old.

In May, another plane of the same make and model operated by state-owned Nepal Airlines crashed while attempting to land at a mountain airstrip in northern Nepal, injuring all 21 people on board.
 

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