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Africa Horn
Cargo plane is shot down in Somalia
2007-03-23
MOGADISHU, Somalia - A cargo plane that had delivered equipment for Ugandan peacekeepers in the Somali capital was shot down by a missile during takeoff Friday, the owner of the plane said, and a witness said he saw the aircraft crash in flames. The fate of the 11-member crew was unknown.

Egi Azarian, the acting head of Belarus-based Transaviaexport, confirmed that the company's plane was shot down Friday. Transaviaexport, based in Minsk, Belarus, operates only Ilyushin-76s, one of the largest cargo planes in the world. The aircraft requires a crew of six, is 153 feet long and can carry nearly 50 tons of cargo.
Being an Ilyushin, I wouldn't be surprised if it crashed on it's own.
I wondered about the plane; didn't think the Ugs had anything like that in their inventory. But this looks like a charter. Wonder if the Daily Kos will condemn these 'mercenaries'?
Muse Sheik Osman, who lives in the north of the city, said he saw the burning plane come down and heard the sound of an anti-aircraft missile being fired shortly before the crash.
How does a AA missile sound any different than the other missiles flying around Mog?
This one actually hit something.
Capt. Paddy Ankunda, spokesman for the Ugandan peacekeepers in Somalia, confirmed a crash. Ankunda said he did not know the nationalities of the crew or whether they had survived. Another plane had made an emergency landing on March 9. An Islamic group claimed it had hit that plane with a missile, but Somali and peacekeeping officials said a mechanical failure likely let to the plane's emergency landing.

The plane crash came at the end of a particularly violent week in Mogadishu that killed dozens of people, most of them civilians.

Much of the violence halted Friday as a truce took effect between military officials from Ethiopia, which sent troops to neighboring Somalia last year to help overthrow the Islamic movement that had overtaken much of the country, and elders of the dominant clan in Somalia's capital. Still, sporadic gunfire could be heard around the former defense ministry building in southern Mogadishu, which has been one of the front lines in the two days of fighting.

One civilian was killed early Friday, possibly by a stray bullet, said Mohamed Barre Olad, who lives near the former defense ministry headquarters. Olad saw the body as he walked home. He said he saw also a wounded man being taken to a hospital in a wheelchair.

An elder, Mohammed Ibrahim Aden, told The Associated Press that 25 Hawiye clan elders met with "several Ethiopian (military) officials" late Thursday and agreed to stop hostilities and begin talks. "We have asked the Ethiopian officials to pull their troops back from front line areas and force government troops to do the same," Aden said. "We have also promised on our part to pull our fighters back from the battle fronts."

Meanwhile, Kenya deported more than 100 people from 19 countries to Somalia after they illegally crossed the border between the two countries during fighting earlier this year. The deportees were subsequently arrested by Ethiopian troops, a human rights group said Friday. The Kenyan government denied refugee status to the group - which included a U.S. citizen - and even sent its own citizens back to face an uncertain future in a country with no functioning legal system, said the chairman of Muslim Human Rights, Al-Amin Kimathi. Ethiopian forces fighting inside Somalia then took the suspects and flew them to two detention centers inside Ethiopia, he added. Kimathi said he had received unconfirmed information that three of the deportees had died while in Ethiopian custody.

Government officials had vowed Thursday to continue fighting the insurgents in Mogadishu who they said are led by the newly chosen head of Somalia's al-Qaida cell, Aden Hashi Ayro. He is one of the people the U.S. targeted in a January airstrike in Somalia. Ayro is a top leader of the ousted Islamic courts and the government had reports he was in Mogadishu, said Deputy Defense Minister Salad Ali Jelle. The Council of Islamic Courts that Ayro served as military commander and was driven from the capital in December after six months in power. The group has promised to launch an Iraq-style guerrilla war, and mortar attacks pound the capital nearly every day.

On Wednesday, Somali intelligence officials ordered the satellite television station Al-Jazeera to close its Mogadishu office, said Abshir Mohamed, the channel's head of administration. Information Minister Madobe Nunow Mohamed told The Associated Press that "Al-Jazeera has conveyed the wrong messages to the world." "We will shut down additional radio stations and channels if they distort facts," he said.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since 1991. The current administration has failed to assert control throughout the country, and the African Union has deployed a small peacekeeping force to defend it.
Posted by:Steve

#3  Breaking it on landing is difficult, but on takeoff, when the system is under maximum stress, the loss of one engine could criple the aircraft and cause a crash. The other possibility is that the warhead struck the rear of an engine, and it started shedding turbine blades. That can be fatal to an aircraft regardless of what else is happening.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-03-23 21:30  

#2  Sitting on the ground, it would be damaged only a little. But, in flight, everything is under dynamic stress, so breaking a small portion can have a big effect.

When missiles are tested, the warhead is replaced by instrumentation and telemetry. Still, even without any warhead at all, a direct hit by an AIM-120, say, will bring a QF-4 down in pieces. So, the bigger they are, the harder they fall.
Posted by: Jackal   2007-03-23 20:33  

#1  I'd think it would be pretty hard to bring down an Il-76 with just one missile. Those things are huge! Of course, I don't have any experience in this kind of thing, so my knee-jerk reaction could be totally wrong.
Posted by: WhitecollarRedneck   2007-03-23 13:32  

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