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No survivors after UN plane carrying 11 people crashes in Haiti

No survivors after UN plane carrying 11 people crashes in Haiti

UN peacekeeper inspects wreckage of MINUSTAH plane that slammed into a mountain (AP Photo/Diev Nalio Chery)
All 11 people aboard a United Nations plane that crashed today in a mountainous area of south-eastern Haiti have been killed, the UN peacekeeping mission to the Caribbean country has confirmed.

The mission, known as MINUSTAH, issued a communiqué that said the plane was on a regular reconnaissance flight in south-eastern Haiti when it crashed around noon into the side of a mountain in the Fonds-Verrettes area, about 45 kilometres from the capital, Port-au-Prince.

The bodies of the 11 passengers and crew have been recovered from the crash site and transported back to Port-au-Prince, where the headquarters of MINUSTAH is located. The names of the people killed have not yet been released but the UN confirmed that the victims include Uruguayan and Jordanian military officers serving with the mission.

MINUSTAH reported that an investigation is already under way into the cause of the crash of the Uruguayan CASA-212 military aircraft, which had departed from Port-au-Prince on a surveillance flight over an area near the Haitian border with the Dominican Republic.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement through his spokesperson tonight in which he extended his condolences to the families, colleagues and friends of the peacekeepers who died, while MINUSTAH did the same in its own communiqué.

MINUSTAH has been in place in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, since mid-2004 after the then president Jean-Bertrand Aristide went into exile amid violent unrest. Currently there are more than 9,000 military and police personnel deployed and nearly 2,000 civilian staff.