Bodies of 2 US crew found at Kyrgyzstan crash site
SEARCH teams yesterday found the bodies of two American crew members near where their military refueling plane crashed in the rugged mountains of Kyrgyzstan, while the third crew member was still missing, the emergencies minister of the Central Asian nation said.
The KC-135 plane crashed Friday afternoon about 160 kilometers west of the air base that the US operates in Kyrgyzstan to support military operations in Afghanistan.
Officials at the US Transit Center at the Manas base have released no information on the cause of the crash.
Emergencies Minister Kubatbek Boronov told The Associated Press that Kyrgyz search teams found the two fragmented bodies yesterday morning and they have not yet been identified. He said the Kyrgyz rescuers were working with US military personnel from Manas to search for the third crewman and the flight recorders.
Dozens of US military personnel scoured the area on Saturday and set up a security cordon around the crash site.
Parts of the plane were scattered across a wide area near the village of Chaldovar. Some pieces, including the tail, came down in a grassy valley bordered by steep mountains, but others landed in spots much more difficult for search teams to reach.
Residents of the rural, sheep-herding region described hearing the plane explode in the air and seeing it break apart as it fell.
"I heard a very loud explosion," Emil Bokochev, a member of the village council, said.
"Literally six or seven seconds afterward there was another explosion and the plane broke apart into four or five pieces and at that moment we thought it was going to fall on the village Chaldovar."
The plane was on a refueling mission for Afghanistan war operations at the time of the crash, a US defense official in Washington said.
The US base, which is adjacent to Manas International Airport outside Bishkek, the Kyrgyz capital, was established in late 2001 to support the international military campaign in Afghanistan. It functions as an interim point for troops going into or out of Afghanistan and as a home for the tanker planes that refuel warplanes in flight.
In 2009, the US reached an agreement with the Kyrgyz government to use it in return for US$60 million a year. But the lease runs out in June 2014, and the US wants to keep the base longer to aid in the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Kyrgyzstan is reluctant to extend the lease.
The KC-135 plane crashed Friday afternoon about 160 kilometers west of the air base that the US operates in Kyrgyzstan to support military operations in Afghanistan.
Officials at the US Transit Center at the Manas base have released no information on the cause of the crash.
Emergencies Minister Kubatbek Boronov told The Associated Press that Kyrgyz search teams found the two fragmented bodies yesterday morning and they have not yet been identified. He said the Kyrgyz rescuers were working with US military personnel from Manas to search for the third crewman and the flight recorders.
Dozens of US military personnel scoured the area on Saturday and set up a security cordon around the crash site.
Parts of the plane were scattered across a wide area near the village of Chaldovar. Some pieces, including the tail, came down in a grassy valley bordered by steep mountains, but others landed in spots much more difficult for search teams to reach.
Residents of the rural, sheep-herding region described hearing the plane explode in the air and seeing it break apart as it fell.
"I heard a very loud explosion," Emil Bokochev, a member of the village council, said.
"Literally six or seven seconds afterward there was another explosion and the plane broke apart into four or five pieces and at that moment we thought it was going to fall on the village Chaldovar."
The plane was on a refueling mission for Afghanistan war operations at the time of the crash, a US defense official in Washington said.
The US base, which is adjacent to Manas International Airport outside Bishkek, the Kyrgyz capital, was established in late 2001 to support the international military campaign in Afghanistan. It functions as an interim point for troops going into or out of Afghanistan and as a home for the tanker planes that refuel warplanes in flight.
In 2009, the US reached an agreement with the Kyrgyz government to use it in return for US$60 million a year. But the lease runs out in June 2014, and the US wants to keep the base longer to aid in the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan. Kyrgyzstan is reluctant to extend the lease.
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