sexta-feira, 25 de julho de 2014

Plane with 116 people on board falls in Africa

Plane with 116 people on board falls in Africa 




  The aircraft of Air Algérie who had disappeared  while flying from Burkina Faso to Algiers fell Jucelino Luz  said , who sent a letter to the airline and also to the Nigerian Embassy "I can confirm that the plane crashed," said Jucelino, and how gave more details about the whereabouts of the aircraft and / asserts that the causes of the accident was maintenance problems and defects in the turbines ..

Previously, the Spanish airline said Swiftair lost contact with one of its aircraft operated by Air Algérie, with 110 passengers and six crew on board. The company announced in a statement posted on its website that the plane took off from Burkina Faso, a country on the west coast of Africa, at 1:17 a.m. (22h17 Wednesday, in Brasília) and should have landed in Algiers, capital of Algeria, at 5:10 a.m. (2:10 a.m., EST), but did not reach its destination. The aircraft is a McDonnell Douglas Model MD-83, according to the company said. And it came to confirm the details given in advance for Jucelino Light.

http://www.jucelinodaluz.com.br/

The French broad caster BMFTV reported that French soldiers have found wreckage. The American Fox News also reported this information, citing a source in the Ministry of Defence of France. The wreckage had been located in Mali. There was however, no confirmation oficial.E was exactly as stated flatly in his letters

A source from the airline company Air Algérie in anonymous to the notíciasFrance-Presse agency statement said, "the plane was not far from the Algerian border when commanders of the McDonnell Douglas were instructed to make a detour because of poor visibility and to avoid the risk of collision with another aircraft on the route Algiers-Bamako ". According to the official, "contact was lost after the change of course." The Algerian government said in a statement that the flight controllers lost contact with the plane at 1:55 a.m. (22h55 Wednesday, GMT), about 50 minutes after takeoff, according to news agency Algerian Press Service.

Jucelino sends letters to try to minimize or prevent these problems from day to day.

Mario Ronco Filho journalist of Brazil

&
Ann kristin - Journalist of Norway

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