Saturday, August 06, 2005
Tunisian Plane with 39 Italians, Crashes in Sea off Palermo, Killing 13 + 3 Missing, Enroute Bari to Tunisia

The ANNOTICO Report

The Tunisian Airliner, ATR-72, which was built in France, according to
Palermo Prosecutor Piero Grasso, reportedly "water landed" in the Sea, and
I immediately thought, how great, it was a "seaplane" with water pontoons.

No, it was a "land" plane that "crash landed" [Definition: To land a
plane under Emergency conditions, usually causing damage to the aircraft].
Such a perspective would consider the recent "incident" in Toronto, in
which no one was killed, but the entire plane was destroyed, merely a "hard
landing"?

13 are killed, 3 are missing, and 9 seriously injured, the plane's wing and
fuselage separated, and it's a "water landing"?

Actually, the plane did Not crash into the Mediterranean Sea, but the
Tyrrrhenian Sea.

Italy is surrounded by Five Seas. The Adriatic, the Ionion, the
Tyrrrhenian, the Ligurian, and the Mediterranean,
which is Only along Sicily's Southern coast, and west of Sardinia.


13 Killed In Italy Plane Crash

CBS News
Rome
August 6, 2005

A Tunisian passenger plane carrying 39 people crash-landed in the
Mediterranean Sea on Saturday while trying to make an emergency landing in
Sicily because of engine trouble, and at least 13 people were killed,
officials said. Three others were missing.

Palermo Prosecutor Piero Grasso told The Associated Press that 23 people
survived and were taken off rescue boats on stretchers at Palermo's port.
Some survivors clung to the plane's wings in rough seas while waiting for
rescuers to arrive, media reports said.

Grasso said 13 people were confirmed dead and three were missing. He said
the toll of 19 he reported earlier was based on overlapping information
from several rescue groups, including the fire department, coast guard and
border police.

“There are no bodies in the wreckage,” Grasso said.

He added that the fuselage of the ATR-72 was being towed to shore.

"Some people were on the wing, screaming, yelling for help," said Filippo
Morgante, an official at Palermo fire department operations center, which
sent boats out for the rescue."

"Others were on the fuselage, and some were trapped inside the plane,"
Morgante said by telephone. "Some weren't wearing lifejackets. Maybe they
didn't have the time to put them on."

Palermo port official Vincenzo Pace told SKY TG24 TV that some bodies were
found several miles from the wreckage, apparently having been carried away
in rough seas.

Nine survivors were reported in serious condition. At least three
crewmembers survived.

Grasso said the twin-propeller plane was forced to make a water landing
about eight miles off Sicily because of a “technical problem” that was
being investigated by authorities and Italy's ENAV air safety agency.

“We can rule out terrorism,” Grasso said.

The plane left Bari, Italy, on its way to Djerba, Tunisia. It was operated
by Tuninter, an affiliate of Tunisair, the national airline of Tunisia.
Tuninter said it had no immediate word on victims.

“The plane had engine problems and was trying to (emergency) land in
Palermo and had to land in the sea,” ENAV spokeswoman Nicoletta Tommessile
told the AP.

The plane's crew contacted the Rome airport tower at 3:24 p.m. to report
engine trouble and say they would have to land at Palermo's airport.
Sixteen minutes later, the plane's crew told tower officials: “We're
ditching in the sea,” Tommessile said.

Palermo fire official Giovanni Saccone said when rescuers arrived, the
plane was still floating. Hours later, the tail broke off and fire
department divers worked to keep the wreckage afloat.

Nine of the survivors were in serious condition, said Capt. Giuseppe
Averna, an official with the sea division of Italy's border police. One
survivor was a young girl, said Giuseppe Pumilia, an emergency room doctor
at Palermo's Villa Sofia hospital, where five survivors were taken.

Three crewmembers were among the survivors at Palermo's Civic Hospital,
officials said.

Tunisian officials said all the passengers were Italian, and SKY said most
of them were from the Puglia region in the heel of the boot-shaped Italian
peninsula.

The ATR-72, which was built in France, has a two-person crew and seats up
to 74 passengers. Its maiden flight was in 1988.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/
2005/08/06/world/main763639.shtml