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Maendeleo Vijijini
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By AFP
Addis Ababa
FAMILIES
of those killed aboard Ethiopia Airlines flight 302 must wait at least five
days to begin receiving some victims’ remains, the company said on Tuesday,
though the identification of others is expected to take much longer.
Trailing
smoke and sparks, the Boeing 737 MAX 8 plunged into a field minutes after
take-off on Sunday from the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, killing all 157
people aboard.
“The
process of identifying the victims will take at least five days,” Ethiopian
Airlines spokesperson Asrat Begashaw told reporters in Addis Ababa on Tuesday.
Due to the
impact and ensuing fire, the identification of some remains could take weeks or
months and may need to be done via dental records or DNA, an industry expert
told Reuters.
The
process will be complicated because the passengers came from more than 30
countries and Ethiopia has limited forensic capabilities, the expert added,
asking not to be named.
Noordin
Mohamed, a 27-year-old Kenyan businessman, said his family had no information
about when they might be able to bury his brother and mother, who is a dual
British-Kenyan citizen.
“We are
Muslim and have to bury our deceased immediately. Now we cannot even recover
any bodies,” he told Reuters in the Kenyan capital Nairobi. “Losing a brother
and mother in the same day and not having their bodies to bury is very
painful.”
Black box
recorders recovered on Monday should help piece together the plane’s last
moments. Ethiopian Airlines’ Begashaw did not comment on where they would be
investigated.
The plane
had roared low over the field, spewing white smoke and debris, before swerving
sharply and crashing, witnesses at the scene told Reuters.
A team
from the Israeli volunteer rescue service ZAKA was hoping to join the crash
site on Tuesday and help identify bodies, said Opher Dach, consul of Israel’s
embassy in Ethiopia.
The 737
line, which has flown for more than 50 years, is the world’s best-selling
modern passenger aircraft.
The new
MAX 8 variant, with bigger engines designed to use less fuel, entered service
in 2017 and were intended to become the workhorses for airlines around the
globe for decades.
But the
Ethiopia disaster followed another crash involving the same model in Indonesia
six months ago. The Lion Air plane crashed into the sea shortly after take-off,
killing 189 people.
By
Tuesday, civil aviation authorities or airlines had grounded about 40% of the
world’s fleet of 737 MAX 8s.
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