ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan -- A plane belonging to Pakistan’s national carrier crashed and burst into flames on Wednesday with 48 people on board, killing all of them, the airline chairman and police said.

According to senior police officer Khurram Rasheed, the plane crashed in a village in the district of Abbottabad, 45 miles northwest of the capital, Islamabad. The small twin-propeller aircraft was travelling from the city of Chitral to Islamabad when it crashed shortly after takeoff.

He said the rescue work is over and that they had transported the remains of the passengers to a local hospital, where doctors were performing DNA tests to identify the victims.

Get Breaking News Delivered to Your Inbox

According to Daniyal Gilani, the spokesman for Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), the plane had lost touch with the control tower prior to the crash. He said the plane was carrying 42 passengers, five crew members and a ground engineer.

Two Austrians and a Chinese citizen were among the dead, he said.

Villagers retrieved remains of passengers killed in a plane crash and placed them in shawls and covered bodies with cloth near Havelian, Pakistan, Dec. 7, 2016. Daily Akhbar Abbottabad



PIA has released names of passengers, who included Junaid Jamshed, a famous singer-turned-Islamic-preacher.

“There are no survivors. All passengers and members of crew are dead,” Azam Sehgal, chairman of the PIA told a news conference at the Islamabad airport late Wednesday. He said the plane’s black box recorder had been found.

Sehgal said the pilot of plane told the control tower at 4:09 p.m. that an engine had developed a technical fault. Moments later he made a “mayday call,” shortly before the plane disappeared.

Sehgal said the plane was fit to fly and it was unclear what caused the crash.

TV footage showed debris from the plane and a massive fire at the site of the crash. The footage showed local villagers collecting the remains of the passengers and covering the bodies with cloths.

Several bodies were later transported to the Ayub Medical Complex, where mourning relatives began arriving to receive the remains.

Among such mourners was tearful Ghulam Rasool Khan, 24, who said his brother Umair Khan was on board the plane.

Ghulam asked police to allow him to identify his brother’s body. However, police officer Iqbal Khan told him there was no point in going to the mortuary as, “there is nothing left which you can recognize.”

Khan said he had heard that the plane was not fit to fly. “It is a murder and I want to know who killed my brother,” he said.

Relatives and friends of Pakistani singer-turned Islamic preacher Junaid Jamshed, comfort each other outside his home following a report that he died in plane crash, in Karachi, Pakistan, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016. AP



Altaf Hussain, a rescue worker who transported the remains of passengers in an ambulance, told the AP that the crash site smelled of burnt flesh and oil and that body parts were scattered everywhere.

“We collected the burned bones of the ill-fated passengers and wrapped them in cloth,” he said.

Ambulance driver Duray Hussain said the remains of the passengers were “beyond recognition.”

One official, Farman Ghori, was crying outside the hospital, saying he saw the faces of two toddlers among the remains. “Oh God, I never saw such a tragedy,” Ghori said.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif expressed his “deep grief and sorrow” over the crash.

In a statement, he said “the entire nation is deeply saddened over today’s unfortunate crash and shares the grief of the families who lost their dear ones.”

Plane crashes are not uncommon in Pakistan. About 150 people were killed in a crash in the hills of Islamabad in 2010. In 2015, a military helicopter carrying several diplomats also crashed in the country’s north, killing eight people. A private plane also crashed near Islamabad due to bad weather in 2012, killing all 127 people on board.