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Search for missing medical plane carrying seven off Senegal

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An air and sea search was underway Sunday for a medical evacuation plane carrying seven people, which went down off the coast of Senegal.

Senegal's civil aviation authority said the craft and a much bigger commercial jet may have "touched" in mid-air, while a local media outlet said the smaller plane was believed to have run out of fuel.

The HS125 twin-engine plane, belonging to the company Senegalair, was flying from Burkina Faso to Dakar with a crew of three, three medical workers and a French patient.

It disappeared from radars shortly after 7 pm (1900 GMT) on Saturday over the Atlantic, 111 kilometres (69 miles) west of the Senegalese capital, Senegal's civil aviation authority Anacim said in a statement.

The plane crossed the path of a Boeing 737-800 operated by Ceiba Intercontinental Airlines, an airline based in Equatorial Guinea, at 1812 GMT around 555 kilometres from Dakar, Anacim said in a later communique.

"Initial information suggest the two aircraft may have touched," it said. "A technical investigation will provide confirmation, or refutation, of this." The Ceiba flight, which was heading to the Benin capital of Cotonou, was re-routed to Malabo, the airline's main hub, it said.

Senegal's Futurs Medias news group reported that the medical aircraft was suspected of having run out of fuel.

Senegal's air force was searching the area for signs of the plane, according to airport sources in Burkina Faso.

Senegal's state press service APS reported that search operations led by two air force planes and a navy ship had continued through Sunday afternoon.

Apart from the female French patient, the plane was carrying two Senegalese nurses and a Senegalese doctor as well as a Congolese man and two Algerian crew members.

Contacted by AFP, France's foreign ministry declined to reveal the identity of the French patient who was being airlifted, nor the reason for the person's presence in Ouagadougou.

Officials did say the French embassy in Dakar was in contact with the patient's family.

An air and sea search was underway Sunday for a medical evacuation plane carrying seven people, which went down off the coast of Senegal.

Senegal’s civil aviation authority said the craft and a much bigger commercial jet may have “touched” in mid-air, while a local media outlet said the smaller plane was believed to have run out of fuel.

The HS125 twin-engine plane, belonging to the company Senegalair, was flying from Burkina Faso to Dakar with a crew of three, three medical workers and a French patient.

It disappeared from radars shortly after 7 pm (1900 GMT) on Saturday over the Atlantic, 111 kilometres (69 miles) west of the Senegalese capital, Senegal’s civil aviation authority Anacim said in a statement.

The plane crossed the path of a Boeing 737-800 operated by Ceiba Intercontinental Airlines, an airline based in Equatorial Guinea, at 1812 GMT around 555 kilometres from Dakar, Anacim said in a later communique.

“Initial information suggest the two aircraft may have touched,” it said. “A technical investigation will provide confirmation, or refutation, of this.” The Ceiba flight, which was heading to the Benin capital of Cotonou, was re-routed to Malabo, the airline’s main hub, it said.

Senegal’s Futurs Medias news group reported that the medical aircraft was suspected of having run out of fuel.

Senegal’s air force was searching the area for signs of the plane, according to airport sources in Burkina Faso.

Senegal’s state press service APS reported that search operations led by two air force planes and a navy ship had continued through Sunday afternoon.

Apart from the female French patient, the plane was carrying two Senegalese nurses and a Senegalese doctor as well as a Congolese man and two Algerian crew members.

Contacted by AFP, France’s foreign ministry declined to reveal the identity of the French patient who was being airlifted, nor the reason for the person’s presence in Ouagadougou.

Officials did say the French embassy in Dakar was in contact with the patient’s family.

AFP
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