BANGKOK
— A plane carrying several senior Laotian government officials crashed
Saturday morning, killing at least three people, a Laotian diplomat said
Saturday.
Killed
in the crash were the minister of defense, Douangchay Phichit, and the
governor of Vientiane province, said the diplomat, who spoke on
condition he not be identified.
The
plane was traveling from the capital, Vientiane, to the mountainous
northeastern province of Xiangkhouang, where the officials were due to
attend an official ceremony.
A
news presenter said the crash occurred at around 7 a.m. “The cause of
the plane crash is still unknown,” the presenter said, adding that the
crash occurred at Baan Nadi, west of the Xiangkhouang airport and not
far from a major archeological site of prehistoric carved stone vessels,
the Plain of Jars.
Thai media reports said the plane was a Lao Air Force Antonov AN-74-300. A Lao Facebook page
showed images of thick black smoke rising up next to what appeared to
be an airport runway. The images could not be independently confirmed.
The
crash was the second in Laos in the last year. Last October 49 people
were killed when a Lao Airlines flight crashed in the south of the
country.
The
Lao government did not appear to issue any statements early Saturday
but the Foreign Ministry in neighboring Thailand said it “received
reports” about the crash.
“There
were about 20 passengers on board of which most were of high stature,”
said Sek Wannamethee, a spokesman for the Thai Foreign Ministry.
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