KHARTOUM, Oct 7 (Reuters) - A Sudanese military plane carrying personnel and equipment to the strife-torn Darfur region crashed near the capital Khartoum on Sunday killing 15 people on board, the army said.
The plane's engine stopped working and the pilot was trying to make an emergency landing when it went down about 40km (25 miles) southwest of the Khartoum suburb of Omdurman, state news agency SUNA reported.
The Antonov 12 transport plane was travelling to El Fasher in northern Darfur, military spokesman Al-Sawarmi Khalid said.
Thirteen people initially died and nine were injured in the crash, all of them military personnel, he added. Two of the injured later died of their wounds, SUNA reported.
There have been several crashes in Sudan in recent years, where years of U.S. sanctions have made it difficult for airlines to get spare parts for their fleets. Antonov aircraft are Russian built however and not subject to sanctions.
The plane belonged to Azza Air, the state-linked Sudanese Media Centre reported. An Azza cargo plane leased by Sudan Airways crashed in the United Arab Emirates in 2009.
In August, 32 people including a government minister died when a plane taking them to an Islamic festival crashed in a southern border state. State media blamed that accident on bad weather.
A military helicopter crashed in the country's North Kordofan state in December because of a technical failure, killing six crew members, the military said at the time.
The armed forces has formed a committee to investigate "the reasons for the recurrence of Antonov aircraft accidents", SUNA said.
Government forces have been battling an insurgency in Darfur since rebels took up arms in 2003, accusing Khartoum of neglecting the remote region.
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Thirteen
Sudanese military personnel died and nine others were injured when
their transport plane crashed west of Khartoum Sunday on its way to
conflict-plagued Darfur, state media reported.
"Thirteen
were killed instantly, and nine were taken to hospital," Sawarmi Khaled
Saad, the Sudanese army spokesman, was quoted as saying by the state
SUNA news agency.
It is the worst toll in a series of Sudanese
military aviation incidents since early last year, and follows a recent
surge of unrest in Darfur, the far-west region where a rebellion began
nearly a decade ago.
Saad said the plane carried six crew and 16 other members of the armed forces.
"The
pilot informed the airport that he had a problem with one of his
engines," before the plane went down in the desert west of Jebel Aulia,
Saad said earlier.
Saad added that the Antonov was carrying military equipment from Khartoum to El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state.
A
witness said a helicopter ferried the dead and injured from the crash
scene, which had been sealed off by soldiers, about 70 kilometres (43
miles) west of the capital.
Jebel Aulia is a popular recreational site about one hour's drive south of the Khartoum area.
Sudan's
armed forces, which rely on Russian-made planes and helicopters, have
experienced a number of aircraft losses in recent years.
In July,
Darfur rebels said they shot down an Mi17 helicopter, killing seven
personnel from the military which blamed a malfunction for the incident.
Last
December, all six crewmen aboard another military helicopter died when
it crash-landed and burned in North Kordofan state. The army blamed a
technical problem, as it did in April last year when a helicopter went
down in Darfur killing all five soldiers aboard.
The United
States on Thursday voiced concern that security in western Darfur was
worsening and threatening the implementation of peace accords there.
"The
United States is deeply concerned by the sharp deterioration in
security in North Darfur and adjacent parts of Jebel Marra, Sudan,"
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.
More
than 70 civilians were killed in Hashaba, north Darfur, between
September 25 and 27 in fighting and aerial bombardments between rebels
and the Sudanese government forces, she said.
The US was also
"appalled" by Tuesday's attack on a UN patrol in which four Nigerian
peacekeepers were killed and eight injured, she added.
Rebels
from black African tribes rose up against the Arab-dominated Khartoum
government in 2003. Clashes with government troops, banditry and
inter-ethnic fighting continue, but the levels of violence have fallen
compared to nearly a decade ago.
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