Specialist
mountain rescue teams from the Ecuadorian and Colombian Red
Cross Societies reached the site of the plane crash on the Cumbal
volcano, to recover bodies from the wreckage. (p7388).
The
Red Cross teams, working with rescuers from the Colombian fire
brigade, had to briefly suspend operations because of bad weather.
(p7392).

The
Red Cross teams battled high winds, intense cold and fog to
set up camp in a rugged area on the slopes of the 4800-metre-high
volcano in Colombia's Nariño department.
(p7391).
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Red Cross teams first to reach crash
site of Ecuador plane
31 January 2002
By Santiago Durango, Ecuadorian Red Cross , in Nariño, Colombia
Specialist mountain rescue
teams from the Ecuadorian and Colombian Red Cross Societies have reached
the site on the Cumbal volcano, just north of the border with Colombia,
where an Ecuadorian airliner crashed on Monday, killing all 92 people
on board.
The Red Cross rescuers found wreckage and debris from the crash over
a wide area but only eight bodies intact; there were no survivors.
The Red Cross teams battled high winds, intense cold and fog to set
up camp in a rugged area on the slopes of the 4800-metre-high volcano
in Colombia's Nariño department.
They said the plane - a Boeing 727-100 of Ecuador's state-run TAME
airline - had crashed into a rock face near the summit of the volcano.
It was carrying 83 passengers, seven crew and two engineers.
There is no indication yet of what caused the accident, but a search
is underway for the flight recorders.
The Red Cross teams, who are working with rescuers from the Colombian
fire brigade, spent more than four hours in the open at the crash
site, but had to briefly suspend operations because of bad weather.
They were transferring the bodies of the victims to the Colombian
city of Ipiales.
The rescue effort has been complicated both by extreme weather conditions
and by the civil conflict in that part of Colombia.
The Boeing 727 had taken off from Ecuador's capital Quito for the
border town of Tulcan, from where it was due to fly on to the Colombian
city of Cali. More than 40 of the passengers were said to be Colombian.
Air traffic controllers lost contact with the plane after the pilots
requested permission to land at Tulcan.
Another TAME Boeing 727 crashed in Colombia in 1998 on a mountain
near Bogota, killing all 53 people on board. Earlier this month, a
twin-engine propeller plane belonging to the Ecuadoran oil company
Petroecuador crashed in Colombia, killing 26 people on board; it was
six days before search teams could find the wreckage.
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