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Boeing 737 Was Plunging at 350MPH in Moments Before Crash in China with 132 Aboard

A Boeing 737 airliner with 132 people aboard has crashed into a mountainous area in southern China in what looks set to be the country’s most deadly plane crash for decades.

The aircraft, on a flight from the city of Kunming to Guangzhou, slammed into a thick forest of bamboo on a hillside in Guanxi province. Thick smoke and huge flames could be seen rising on a video posted by the South China Morning Post but it was unclear whether the was already a fire in the area.

Tracking data showed the aircraft cruising at 29,100 feet at 2.20 p.m. Some two minutes later it had dropped to just over 9,000 feet and 20 seconds after that to just 3,225 feet. FlightRadar said that indicated a vertical descent of 31,000 feet per minute—or around 350 mph.

Another video circulating on social media, the authenticity of which The Daily Beast could not immediately verify, appeared to show the aircraft streaking into the ground in a nose-down vertical position. U.S. government-backed Radio Free Asia reported that the video was captured by CCTV at a mine.

“Can confirm the plane has crashed,” China Eastern Airlines said in a statement announcing a special hotline for passengers’ relatives.

Flight MU5735 left the southwestern city of Kunming at 1:11 p.m. and had been due to land at Guanzhou at 3:05 p.m. According to data from FlightRadar24, the six-year-old Boeing 737-800 was last tracked at 2:22 p.m.

The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) said the aircraft, with 123 passengers and nine crew aboard, had lost contact over the city of Wuzhou. Earlier reports from Chinese state media had said there were 133 people on board.

Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed his shock at the news and called for an “all-out effort” in the rescue operation. But according to a firefighting official quoted by the state-run People’s Daily newspaper, there was no sign of life among the debris.

Once known as a black spot for plane crashes, China has cleaned up its act in recent years, investing in a young modern fleet of aircraft and strict safety controls.

China’s last fatal airliner accident is thought to have been in 2010, when an an Embraer E-190 jet flown by Henan Airlines crashed on approach to Yichun airport in low visibility. Forty-four of 96 people aboard were killed.

Mainland China’s most deadly crash was in June 1994, when a Tupolev TU-154 broke up in mid-flight, killing all 160 people aboard.

Boeing started making the 737-800, a narrow-bodied single-aisle commuter plane, in the mid-1990s and delivered 5,200 to airlines around the world before it was phased out two years ago. China Eastern has more than 100 of the planes, which it has now grounded while Monday's crash is investigated.

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by Anonymousreply 8May 18, 2022 4:11 AM

How in the hell was the plane vertical???

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by Anonymousreply 1March 21, 2022 3:55 PM

Actual video footage.

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by Anonymousreply 2March 21, 2022 3:56 PM

Since 2001 I have had recurrent nightmares of planes crashing nosedown, completely vertical. It happened with the Egypt Air crash, probably Malaysia Air.

by Anonymousreply 3March 21, 2022 4:09 PM

We already have a thread on this...

116 responses.

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by Anonymousreply 4March 21, 2022 4:12 PM

Thoughts and Prayers, China.

Little of one and none of the other, China.

by Anonymousreply 5March 21, 2022 4:12 PM

Looks like it might have been INTENTIONAL.

[quote] The Wall Street Journal reported earlier on Tuesday that flight data from one of the Boeing 737-800's black boxes indicated that someone in the cockpit intentionally crashed the plane, citing people familiar with the preliminary assessment of U.S. officials.

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by Anonymousreply 6May 18, 2022 3:17 AM

Sum Ting Wong!

by Anonymousreply 7May 18, 2022 3:50 AM

Pilot was probably mental. The US does not have a monopoly on crazies.

by Anonymousreply 8May 18, 2022 4:11 AM
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