At least 18 killed after Pakistani military plane crashes into house

Incident happened in garrison city of Rawalpindi early on Tuesday

Pakistani soldiers and officers survey the site after a military aircraft on a training flight crashed in a built-up area in the garrison city of Rawalpindi. Photograph: Reuters.
Pakistani soldiers and officers survey the site after a military aircraft on a training flight crashed in a built-up area in the garrison city of Rawalpindi. Photograph: Reuters.

At least 18 people were killed in the Pakistani garrison city of Rawalpindi early on Tuesday when a military aircraft on a training flight appeared to crash into a house in a built-up area.

All five crew members and 13 civilians were killed and the crashed plane started a large fire.

A statement from the Pakistani military said the aircraft was on a routine training flight when it crashed but there was no immediate word on the cause of the accident or the type of aircraft involved.

The site of a military plane crash in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, in which at least 17 people were killed. Photograph: Anjum Naveed/AP.
The site of a military plane crash in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, in which at least 17 people were killed. Photograph: Anjum Naveed/AP.

Military and civilian rescue workers took at least 12 injured civilians to hospitals in the city and extinguished the fire, leaving the smoking ruins of a house which appeared to have borne the brunt of the crash.

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“The plane hit the side of the building and the structure it has crashed into has completely collapsed,” an army officer at the scene said.

The site, close to an affluent housing development called Bahia Town, was surrounded by military and rescue service vehicles and security officials pushed back a crowd of bystanders.

Rawalpindi is close to the capital Islamabad and is where the headquarters of the Pakistan army is based.

Earlier, the website of newspaper The News International carried footage showing a building engulfed in flames in the immediate aftermath of the crash. Reuters