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‘We heard a blast’: The suburban neighbourhood in Karachi shocked by passenger jet crash

Crowds rush to scene of crash on outskirts of city, ignoring social distancing rules

Amar Guriro
Karachi
Saturday 23 May 2020 08:11 EDT
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Pakistan plane crash: Airbus jet comes down near Karachi airport

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Model Colony is a densely populated residential area of Pakistan’s commercial city of Karachi, where a Pakistan International Airlines plane flying from Lahore to Karachi crashed on Friday afternoon.

This middle class neighbourhood is away from the city centre, located in the outskirts of the city just behind the Jinnah International airport, where the crashed flight was supposed to land. The site is around a kilometre away from the boundary of the international airport.

The plane crashed in a small and narrow closed street of Model Colony with houses on either side, where locals used to park their cars. Several cars parked on the street caught fire after the crash. The crash site was so congested that the rescue workers had to break portion of a wall to reach the crashed plane.

After the flight crashed, locals of the nearby neighbourhoods recorded scenes with their cellphones in which plumes of thick black smoke rising from the site could be seen, and later shared on their social media sites.

Shortly after the crash, military and security personnel rushed to the site while large numbers of firefighters, ambulances run by charities and cranes also reached the site.

Authorities suspended power as overhead electricity wires and a power grid were creating hurdles in the movement of rescue cranes.

Recently, local government in Pakistan’s Sindh province eased the ongoing Covid-19 lockdown ahead of Eid al-Fitr, and as a result large numbers of people rushed to the scene, ignoring social distancing instructions.

Officials said that presence of such a large number of people near the crash site was creating hurdles in rescue work. Security personnel were thus deployed at the entrance of Model Colony to keep the people from entering the already congested area.

Due to Covid-19, all educational institutes have been closed for the past three months and most of the students spend their time at home. Muhammad Shabir, a secondary school student and resident of the neighbourhood, was at the roof of his house with his friend.

“We were busy flying kites. We saw the plane flying in an unusual way and instead of going to the airport it was coming to our colony and then crashed. We heard a blast and plumes of smoke rising from the site. First we rushed to the site but later we thought, we must not go close so we went back home.”

A large number of people from other areas also reached the colony to enquire about their relatives or friends. As a result mobile phone signal was interrupted. Safdar Ali, a carpenter, said that he came to know about his uncle living in the colony. “I tried to calling his mobile, but it was not responding, so I came here. But security personnel are neither allowing me to enter the area and nor anyone is giving me any information.”

Faisal Edhi, head of Pakistan’s largest charity, Edhi Foundation, told The Independent that Edhi ambulances took more than two-dozen people from the site to the hospital and that “the majority of the bodies had oxygen masks on”.

As the sun was about to set, visibly tired rescue workers who had been busy in search and rescue operation since the afternoon sat down to break their fast. With fatigue and grief on their faces, they were quick to break their fast to get back to the relief work. By the time they started to work again, the area was lit up with huge flashlights but the gloom remained.

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