Boat finds wreckage of crashed airliner off
Comoros: officials
Vice President to CNN: "No survivors."

From the BNO Newsroom.
MORONI, Comoros (BNO NEWS) -- A boat found the wreckage of a Yemenia Airlines passenger plane on Tuesday morning, several hours after it went down in the Indian Ocean off Comoros, officials told BNO News. More than 150 people are presumed dead.
Around 8 a.m. local time, or 5 a.m. GMT, a boat which was assisting in the search for the crashed airliner reported that it had found the wreckage of the plane, a government official confirmed to BNO News. Search planes had also spotted the wreckage, according to the Reuters news agency.
Shortly after, three bodies were recovered from the area where the plane came down. No survivors were immediately spotted and officials believed it was unlikely anyone survived the crash. The plane was mostly destroyed following the crash, the government reported, leaving behind only small parts of wreckage. Comoros Vice President Idi Nadhoim told CNN International that there were no survivors.
The plane went down in the Indian Ocean, close to the coast. "The wreckage was found about six minutes from the airport," the government official added. An official at the Comoros Foreign Ministry earlier said that residents from villages on the coast had witnessed the crash.
The plane, an Airbus 310, was carrying a total of 147 passengers and 11 crew members. International media outlets reported that 142 passengers were on board but, according to the foreign ministry official who had received the complete passenger list, that figure is incorrect. He added to say that 156 of the people on board were Comoran and that two foreign names, likely French citizens, were on the passenger list. "They are European names, we believe they are French," he said.
It was Yemenia Airlines flight 626 which took off from Sana'a International Airport in Yemen, about four and a half hour before it crashed, minutes before reaching its destination. It was en-route to Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport in Moroni, the capital of Comoros.
It is unclear if the boat, which found the wreckage, belonged to Comoros or another country in the area. "Comoros does not have the facilities" to launch a rescue operation, a government official earlier said. He also said that a number of boats were en-route to the area and that France had sent a boat to assist in the search and rescue operation.
"We are hoping" for survivors, the foreign ministry official said before the wreckage was found. The cause of the crash is unknown, although foul play is not suspected.
On November 23, 1996, Ethiopian Airlines flight 961 was hijacked and crashed near Comoros in the Indian Ocean after it ran out of fuel. A total of 175 passengers were on board, 125 of them were killed.
Earlier incidents
involving Yemenia Airlines
Tuesday's plane crash is the worst accident in the history of Yemenia
Airlines, records showed. The airline, which was founded in 1961, had been
involved in three accidents.
On June 26, 2000, a Boeing 737 went off the side of the runway at Khartoum-Civil Airport in Sudan, causing the nose gear to collapse. There were no injuries.
On August 1st, 2001, a Boeing 727 overran the runway at Asmara International Airport in Eritrea and crashed into a large block of concrete, causing the main landing gear to fail. There were no casualties.
On January 22nd, 2001, an Iraqi man hijacked a Yemenia Airlines flight about 15 minutes after it took off from San'a International Airport in Yemen. He was armed with a pen gun and claimed to have explosives with him. He demanded to be taken to Baghdad but the flight crew overpowered the hijacker when it made a landing in Djibouti to refuel.
It is the second time in less than a month that an Airbus is involved in a fatal plane crash.
Stay with bnonews.com and "BreakingNews" on Twitter for the latest up-to-the-minute news updates.
###