Tanzania plane crash survivors, rescuers describe heroics laced with
tragedy
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[November 08, 2022]
By Benson Jacob
BUKOBA, Tanzania (Reuters) - When the
waters of Lake Victoria started gushing into the cabin of Flight PW494,
passenger Mectrida Samuel knew she had to act fast. Around her, others
were frantically trying free themselves and keep above the fast-rising
water.
"We had a big crash and I immediately started seeing water enter the
plane. Passengers started to struggle to rescue themselves," Samuel
said, describing the moments after the Precision Air flight to Bukoba
plunged into the lake in northern Tanzania.
"The only thing that helped me survive was that I managed to remove my
seat belt and get out of the seat on time."
Minutes earlier, the twin turboprop with 43 people on board had hit a
thunderstorm carrying heavy rain and powerful downdrafts.
A witness saw the plane flying unsteadily in poor visibility when it
took a turn for the airport but missed, careering into the lake at 8:53
a.m. (0553 GMT). The Tanzanian authorities are yet to determine the
causes of the crash.
In the hours and days after the accident, reports of survival and
dramatic rescue efforts have started to emerge.
The two pilots survived the impact and remained in touch with rescue
workers from the cockpit for a couple of hours, a local administrator
said, before reporting that their oxygen supply was dwindling.
Onlookers, including fisherman Majaliwa Jackson, rushed to the
semi-submerged aircraft to help pull out trapped passengers.
Jackson dived into the water and managed to communicate with the pilots
by signalling through the window, he told the BBC.
The pilots directed him to try and smash the windscreen, but an official
told him not to, he said.
He dived into the water a final time and waved goodbye.
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The remains of the Precision Air ATR
42-500 passenger plane that plunged into Lake Victoria is seen in
Bukoba, Tanzania November 7, 2022. Tanzania Prime Minister
Office/Handout via REUTERS
DRAGGING THE PLANE OUT
Video footage of the scene shows fishing boats and people on the
shore trying to drag the plane out of the water with ropes tied to
the tail fin.
Crash survivor Samuel had managed to swim towards the back of the
aircraft, where one of the cabin crew members helped open the
emergency door, she said.
"After a few minutes, local fishermen came to rescue us," she said.
By the time rescue workers reached the pilots, their air supply had
run out and the pair were dead, authorities said.
Another man, who had been returning from his niece's wedding in
another part of the country was also amongst the dead, according his
relative Alfred Tibaigana.
"We have received this tragedy of our loving relative with great
sadness," Tibaigana told Reuters.
At a ceremony in a sports stadium in Bukoba town on Monday,
relatives, religious leaders and government officials filed past the
coffins of the 19 people who perished in the incident, each
decorated with flowers and a photograph of the deceased.
The government said it will reward Jackson, who had tried in vain to
rescue the pilots, for his bravery with 1 million Tanzanian
shillings ($430) and hire him as a first responder.
(Reporting by Benson Jacob; Writing by Hereward Holland; Editing by
Angus MacSwan)
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