Nepal police find plane wreckage

Authorities say there are no survivors from the crash of a Nepal Airlines plane which went missing after taking off from the tourist town of Pokhara.

Relatives of plane crash victims gather outside an Airlines complex

Rescuers in Nepal are searching on foot for a missing Nepal Airlines plane carrying 18 passengers. (AAP)

Nepalese police have found the wreckage of a missing Nepal Airlines plane carrying 18 people in the country's mountainous west but there are no survivors.

"The plane crashed into a hill, police have found its wreckage in a village, but no survivors," Bimlesh Lal Karna, chief air traffic controller at the country's largest airport in Kathmandu, told AFP.

The plane, carrying 15 passengers including an infant and three crew, lost contact with air traffic controllers shortly after taking off from the popular tourist town of Pokhara on Sunday afternoon, airline officials and police said.

The aircraft from the state-run carrier was travelling to the town of Jumla, 353km west of Kathmandu, when air traffic controllers lost contact.

Heavy rain hampered Sunday's efforts to locate the plane with two helicopters forced to turn back because of bad weather.

Police finally spotted scattered pieces of the wreckage while conducting an aerial search of Arghakhanchi district, 226km west of the capital, aviation official Karna said.

One of the passengers is from Denmark, according to airline spokesman Ram Hari Sharma.

The rest of those on board - including Manab Sejuwal, a local politician from the ruling Nepali Congress party - are from Nepal.

The crash again raises concerns about the Himalayan nation's aviation sector, which has come under fire from international authorities after a series of fatal accidents.

The European Union in December banned all the country's airlines from flying to the EU.

Nepal, which counts tourism as a major contributor to its economy, has suffered a number of air crashes in recent years, which have usually been attributed to inexperienced pilots, poor management and inadequate maintenance.


2 min read

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Updated

Source: AAP


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