At least one dead as DHL cargo plane crashes into house in Lithuania just weeks after suspicious 'Russia-linked' device found in UK site

WATCH: Emergency services work among the wreckage of a DHL cargo plane

Reuters
George Bunn

By George Bunn


Published: 25/11/2024

- 08:30

Updated: 25/11/2024

- 09:16

Rescue services said the plane hit the ground and slid at least 100 metres before crashing into the building

A DHL cargo plane crashed into a house as it made its approach to land at Lithuania’s Vilnius airport, killing one person and injuring three others on the aircraft.

The flight was operated by SWIFT airline on behalf of DHL and had taken off from Leipzig, Germany before the plane crashed around 3.30am.


All of the people in the house survived, he added. The spokesperson said there was nothing to suggest an explosion preceded the crash.

He said: "At the moment we don't have any data that there was an explosion."

Burning goods following the crash of a cargo plane near Vilnius International Airport

Burning goods following the crash of a cargo plane near Vilnius International Airport

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A map showing the crash location\u200b

A map showing the crash location

Getty

\u200bThe wreckage of a cargo plane in the courtyard of a house following its crash near Vilnius International Airport

The wreckage of a cargo plane in the courtyard of a house following its crash near Vilnius International Airport

Getty

Police told a press conference 12 people had been evacuated from the house hit by the plane. Rescue services said the plane hit the ground and slid at least 100 metres before crashing into the building.

Firefighters were seen at 5.30am pouring water onto a smoking building some 1.3 km north of the airport runway.

A large police and ambulance presence was seen nearby and several nearby major streets were cordoned off.

The flight had departed from Leipzig at 2.08am Flightradar24 said on the X social media platform.

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\u200bLithuanian law enforcement officers work at the crash site of a cargo plane near Vilnius International Airport

Lithuanian law enforcement officers work at the crash site of a cargo plane near Vilnius International Airport

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It comes after British counter-terrorism police said shortly afterwards that they were investigating a warehouse fire in July, caused by a package catching alight, and liaising with other European law enforcement agencies to see if there was a connection with similar incidents elsewhere.

An incendiary device plot that caused fires at two parcels warehouses in July, one in Leipzig and another in Birmingham.

Brandon Fried, executive director of the Airforwarders Association, which represents the air freight industry in the US, described the incendiary bomb incidents as disconcerting given the suspicion of Russian state involvement.

He told The Guardian: "It looks like the goal is simply to disrupt the supply chain, create havoc and simply to scare people. They want people to lose confidence in the system."

A Lithuanian rescuer walks past the wreckage of a cargo plane following its crash near Vilnius International Airport

A Lithuanian rescuer walks past the wreckage of a cargo plane following its crash near Vilnius International Airport

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Weather at Vilnius International Airport was around freezing temperature, with clouds before sunrise.

The Boeing 737 was 31 years old and considered by experts to be an older airframe, although this is said not to be unusual for cargo flights.

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