Plane crashes after take-off in Malta, five French crewmembers dead

It was headed for Misrata in Libya for monitoring migrant trafficking routes for the French government..

October 24, 2016 02:36 pm | Updated December 02, 2016 11:23 am IST - VALLETTA:

Emergency workers seen at the site of the wreckage of a small twin-engined plane that crashed shortly after take-off from the Malta International Airport, on Monday.

Emergency workers seen at the site of the wreckage of a small twin-engined plane that crashed shortly after take-off from the Malta International Airport, on Monday.

A small plane heading toward Misrata on Libya’s coast to monitor migrant trafficking routes for the French government crashed soon after takeoff from Malta’s airport on Monday, killing all five French crewmembers, authorities said.

The twin-prop Fairchild Metroliner banked to the right and slammed into the ground in a huge fireball soon after lifting off at 7:20 a.m. (local time), according to video of the moment captured by a dashboard videocam and posted on Facebook.

All victims were French

Malta’s government said all five victims were French. It said the flight was part of a French Customs surveillance operation tracing routes of illicit trafficking, both of humans and drugs, leaving Libya’s lawless coasts. Libya is the main point of departure for the tens of thousands of migrants who have been paying smugglers to bring them toward Europe by boat.

Earlier, authorities had said the flight was headed to Misrata; the government said later that the aircraft was due to return to Malta within a few hours without landing elsewhere.

Used for surveillance flights

Malta’s International Airport is used for surveillance flights to Libya due to its proximity. The government said the French Customs operation has been active for about five months.

The airport was closed for four hours while debris was cleared, delaying more than a dozen flights, according to a notice on the airport website.

The Metroliner was registered in the United States and leased to a Luxembourg company, the government statement said.

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