Colombian authorities say evidence
is growing that a plane carrying a Brazilian football team crashed
because it ran out of fuel as it tried to land.
The plane had no
fuel on impact, an official said, corroborating audio of the pilot
asking to land because of a fuel shortage and electric failure.
The capital Bogota was mentioned on the flight plan as a possible refuelling stop, but the plane did not land there.
The plane plunged into a mountainside near Medellin late on Monday.
Only six of the 77 people on board the plane survived.
"Having
been able to do an inspection of all of the remains and parts of the
plane, we can affirm clearly that the aircraft did not have fuel at the
moment of impact," civil aviation chief Alfredo Bocanegra told a news
conference.
Freddy Bonilla, another aviation official, said regulations
stipulated that aircraft must have 30 minutes of fuel in reserve to
reach an alternative airport in an emergency, but "in this case the
plane did not have" it.
"The engines are the electrical source...
but without fuel, obviously the electrical source would have been
completely lost," he added.
In a leaked tape, the pilot can be
heard warning of a "total electric failure" and "lack of fuel". Just
before the tape ends, he says he is flying at an altitude of 9,000ft
(2,745m).
The plane was carrying the Brazilian football team Chapecoense, who had been due to play a cup final against Atletico Nacional in Medellin on Wednesday evening.
Refuelling stops
The team flew from Sao Paulo to Santa Cruz on a commercial flight, then switched to the chartered aircraft.
Brazil's
O Globo reported that because of a delayed departure, a refuelling stop
in Cobija, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, was abandoned
because the airport did not operate at night.
The pilot had the option to refuel in Bogota, but headed straight to Medellin.
"The
pilot was the one who took the decision," Gustavo Vargas, a
representative of Lamia, which operated the plane, was quoted as saying
in Bolivian newspaper Pagina Siete. "He thought the fuel would last."
Approaching Medellin, the pilot asked for permission to land because of fuel problems, without making a formal distress call.
But
another plane from airline VivaColombia had priority because it had
already reported mechanical problems, the co-pilot of another plane in
the air at the time said.
The pilot of the crashed plane is heard asking urgently for directions to the airport before the audio recording ends.
Officials
say the plane's "black boxes", which record flight details, will be
sent to the UK to be opened by investigators. A full investigation into
the crash is expected to take months.
On Wednesday night, when the match
had been due to take place, tens of thousands of fans gathered at the
Medellin stadium - and at Chapecoense's home ground in Chapeco - to pay
tearful tributes.
Many wore white and carried candles as a mark of
respect. Chapecoense lost 19 players in the crash. Twenty journalists
were also killed.
Of the survivors, Chapecoense said that two players remained in a
critical but stable condition, while the club's goalkeeper had had one
leg amputated and might still lose his other foot.
An injured journalist also remained in critical condition, the club said.
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