57 survive aircraft crash in Peruvian jungle

PERU: Rescue workers with machetes hacked through swamps yesterday to search for bodies in the wreckage of a TANS airline jet…

PERU: Rescue workers with machetes hacked through swamps yesterday to search for bodies in the wreckage of a TANS airline jet that crashed in Peru's northern jungle, killing at least 41 people, including foreign tourists on Tuesday.

Police and firefighters knee-deep in water pulled five bodies from the Boeing 737-200 as the search resumed at daybreak.

"They weren't whole bodies, but remains, all charred by fire," said Marco Ochoa, a state prosecutor leading the investigation at the crash site in Pucallpa, 785km (488 miles) northeast of Lima.

The airliner, carrying 92 passengers, came down in swamps 3km (1.87 miles) from Pucallpa airport as it tried to land on Tuesday in heavy storms. Police said the aircraft broke in two on landing and the front half caught fire.

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"We've located five more survivors and that takes the number to 57. Two people are still missing and there are 41 dead," TANS executive Jorge Belevan said.

Authorities do not expect to find more passengers alive. "The survivors were seated in the back of the plane," said police officer Johnny Luna in Pucallpa. "They managed to get out and walk through the swamp to the nearest road."

The flight had been due to fly on to the Peruvian Amazon city of Iquitos, a popular tourist destination. It was the third major accident involving a passenger aircraft in less than two weeks, after crashes in Greece and Venezuela. In January 2003 a TANS aircraft slammed into a hill in Peru's northern jungle, killing all 46 people on board.

A local television reporter said the debris from the crash was scattered over a 500-square-metre area. "It's very inaccessible territory. The fuselage is totally shattered. We just have to keep looking," said Luis Aldana, mayor of the nearby village of Portillo.

TANS said 11 US citizens were on board, along with two Italians, a Colombian, an Australian and a Spanish woman.

Police said an Italian man, an American man, a Colombian woman and a Spanish woman also died in the crash. Six US citizens, all from the same family in New York, survived

Relatives said some of the cabin crew threw themselves out the emergency doors the moment the aircraft hit the ground and survivors spoke of fires breaking out as they landed.

Experts said the harsh weather at the time of landing meant there was little the two pilots, who local media said died, could have done to avoid the accident.

About 10 minutes before landing, the aircraft was caught in a fierce storm that was unusual for August, survivors said. "Those crosswinds produce air currents that go up and down and a pilot simply cannot fly in such conditions," said John Elliot, president of the Peruvian pilots association.

TANS, founded in the 1960s by the Peruvian air force to help serve remote jungle communities, became a commercial airline in 1998.