A passenger plane en route from Moscow crashed on a highway in northern Russia, killing 44 people and injuring eight, Russia’s Emergencies Ministry said today.
The Tupolev 154 broke apart and burst into flames when it hit the road two kilometers (1.2 miles) short of the runway in Petrozavodsk at about midnight, the ministry said in a statement on its website. Petrozavodsk is about 700 kilometers north of Moscow.
The plane was making its final approach in “adverse weather conditions,” the Interfax news agency reported, citing Alexei Kuzmitsky, general director of the Petrozavodsk airport. Fog shrouded the airport at the time, the agency said, quoting another person it did not identify.
The eight survivors were taken to local hospitals, the report said. Both of the plane’s flight-data recorders were recovered. Interfax said the aircraft was flown by the Moscow- based RusAir airline.
The plane was carrying 43 passengers and nine crew, according to the ministry. It was the deadliest commercial airline disaster in Russia since September, 2008, when an Aeroflot-Nord Boeing 737 crashed near Perm, killing 88 people, according to the Aviation Safety Network website.