DayFR Euro

One killed as DHL cargo plane crashes in Lithuania

A DHL cargo plane crashed into a house in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius, killing one person and injuring three.

The plane, which took off from the German city of Leipzig, crashed at about 5.30am local time on Monday into a house near Vilnius airport. The 12 inhabitants of the house all survived, according to emergency services, while one crew member died and three were injured.

Police said they were investigating the crash, with a technical fault or human error as the most likely cause. But Arūnas Paulauskas, head of Lithuanian police, refused to rule out terrorism as a possible cause.

“The inspection of the scene, the collection of evidence could take a week. There will be no answers soon,” he added.

DHL, the German parcel group, has been the target of two parcel fires in recent months involving packages sent from Lithuania. The incidents have been linked by the country’s officials to Russian military intelligence.

Germany said last month that it had narrowly avoided a plane crash when a parcel destined for an aircraft’s hold burst into flames before the flight at a DHL logistics centre in Leipzig.

The UK’s counterterrorism police are also investigating the origins of another package that caught fire at a DHL depot in Birmingham in July.

Kęstutis Budrys, national security adviser to Lithuania’s President Gitanas Nausėda, said this month that Russian military intelligence was behind the attacks. Two European security officials said the incidents were designed to test whether flights bound for the US could be attacked in the same manner.

The plane that crashed on Monday was operated by the Spanish airline Swiftair for DHL. Lithuania’s national crisis management centre told Reuters it had no data at present to suggest there had been an explosion before the crash.

The aircraft was destroyed by the crash with the wreckage and the cargo strewn over a large area close to the airport, according to police.

Darius Jauniškis, head of the State Security department, Lithuania’s intelligence agency, said no cause for the crash could yet be established but also refused to rule out terrorism.

“We see Russia becoming more aggressive. Foreign partners have talked about the dangers of sabotage, a certain threat of terrorism,” added Jauniškis, who cautioned it was still too early to apportion blame for the crash.

-

Related News :