A survivor of the plane crash in Colombia in which a Brazilian soccer team was decimated said the crew never gave the passengers any warning about the impending disaster.

Rafael Henzel, a 43-year-old journalist traveling with the Chapecoense team on board the LaMia charter plane, said they were not even told to fasten their seat belts, the BBC reported.

Henzel is one of only six people to survive the Nov. 28 crash of the Avro RJ85 near Medellin that claimed the lives of 71 of 77 aboard, including 19 players who were en route to the Copa Sudamericana final against Atletico Nacional.

In addition to Henzel, three players, Alan Luciano Ruschel, Jackson Ragnar Follmann and Helio Hermito Zampier Neto, flight attendant Ximena Suarez and crew member Erwin Tumiri survived when the plane ran out of fuel.

In his first interview since the accident, Henzel told Brazil’s Fantastico TV that the passengers were left in the dark about the developing crisis.

“No one told us to fasten our seat belts,” he said. “Every time we asked when we’d arrive we were told, ‘Ten minutes.’ Then the lights and the engines went off. That scared us somewhat, but we weren’t warned of anything. We didn’t know what was going on.”

Henzel — who broke seven ribs — said he had been sitting in the next-to-last row between journalist Renan Agnolin and cameraman Djalma Arauhjo Neto, both of whom died.

He said he was sickened to learn the cause of the accident was believed to be a lack of fuel.

“People died because of a lack of judgment,” he said. “That is revolting.”

Neto was taken off a ventilator this weekend after spending nine days in a drug-induced coma. His first question was how his team had fared in the planned match.

“It’s a recommendation from the psychologist not to tell him [about the plane crash] just yet to avoid any emotional shock that would be potentially damaging for his clinical recovery at this moment,” Dr. Carlos Mendonca told Brazilian station TV Globo, CBS News reported.

Atletico Nacional asked the South American Football Confederation to award the trophy to Chapecoense in light of the tragedy, CBS News reported.

Meanwhile, Bolivian Defense Minister Reymi Ferreira has described the crash as a “murder.”

His claim follows last week’s release of chilling recordings between Capt. Miguel Quiroga and an air traffic controller in which the pilot reported being out of fuel and called a desperate mayday.

The Daily Mail has reported that the plane ran out of fuel because the crew searched for a player’s video game before taking off from Santa Cruz de la Sierra in Bolivia.

Quiroga had planned to stop to refuel in Cobija — a Bolivian city bordering with Brazil — but the airport there did not operate after midnight, the paper reported.

“This was definitely no accident. This was a homicide. What happened in Medellin was murder,” Ferreira said, the Metro newspaper of the UK reported.

“Obviously, if the pilot had complied with the regulation, which is to land in Cobija or Bogota (Colombia), or had at least declared an emergency from the beginning, before he was about to have an accident, it’s possible this tragedy would not have happened,” he said.

Colombia’s civil aviation safety chief has said the pilot disregarded international rules on fuel reserves.

In other developments, a Brazilian soccer group refuted reports Monday that Chapecoense was fined almost $30,000 for missing its final match of the season against Atletico Mineiro.

ESPN Deportes initially reported that the Brazilian Football Confederation fined the team $29,850 and handed the teams automatic 3-0 defeats for not playing.

“We do not have any application of financial punishment to the Chapecoense team,” Fernando Torres, an official with the soccer group, told The Post in a statement.

Chapecoense and Atletico Mineiro played their match in the end, Torres said.

“On the day of the tragedy, (federation) President Marco Polo Del Nero determined seven days of mourning in Brazilian football,” he said, adding that the soccer federation pledged $1.5 million to support the grieving club.

Footage from the site of the plane crash shows just how horrifying this tragedy was: