Airliner shootdown incidents have occurred since at least the 1930s, either intentionally or by accident. This chronological list shows instances of airliners being brought down by gunfire or missile attacks – including during wartime – rather than by terrorist bombings or sabotage of an airplane.
This incident is believed to be the first commercial passenger plane attacked by hostile forces.[1] On 24 August 1938 – during the Second Sino-Japanese War – the Kweilin, a DC-2 jointly operated by China National Aviation Corporation (CNAC) and Pan American World Airways, carrying 18 passengers and crew, was forced down by Japanese aircraft in Chinese territory just north of Hong Kong. 15 people died when the Kweilin, which made an emergency water landing to avoid the attack, was strafed by the Japanese and sunk in a river. The American pilot Hugh L. Woods and two others survived. Three prominent Chinese bankers, Hu Yun, Xu Xinliu (Singloh Hsu), and Wang Yumei, were among the dead. It was later believed to be an assassination attempt on Chinese presidentSun Yat-sen's only son, Sun Fo, who was believed by the Japanese to be aboard but missed the flight. The plane was refurbished, renamed the Chungking, and was later involved in a second shootdown incident, in 1940.[2]
1940s
Sabena OO-AUI
OO-AUI, a Douglas DC-3-227B owned by Sabena, was hit by anti-aircraft fire over Calais on a flight from Merville to London on May 23, 1940. The pilot made a forced landing near Arques, killing the navigator and injuring 2 passengers. The surviving crew and passengers were taken POW.[3]
The Kaleva (registered OH-ALL) was a civilian Junkers Ju 52-3/mge passenger aircraft operated by Finnish carrier Aero O/Y which was shot down by two SovietIlyushin DB-3 bombers on 14 June 1940, over the Baltic Sea while en route from Tallinn, Estonia to Helsinki, Finland.[4] This occurred during the Interim Peace between Finland and the Soviet Union, three months after the end of the Winter War, and a year before the Continuation War began. A few minutes after taking off in Tallinn, the Kaleva was intercepted by Soviet DB-3s. The bombers opened fire with their machine guns and badly damaged the Kaleva, causing it to ditch into seawater in the Gulf of Finland, a few kilometers northeast of Kerilighthouse. All seven passengers and two crew members on board died.[5]
Air France F-ARTD
F-ARTD, a Dewoitine D.338 of Air France, was accidentally shot down by French anti-aircraft fire near Ouistreham on June 20, 1940. The sole occupant was killed.[6]
Air France F-AQBA
F-AQBA, another Dewoitine D.338 of Air France, was shot down by a Japanese military fighter over the Gulf of Tonkin on July 7, 1940. All 4 occupants were killed.[7]
Eurasia XXV
XXV, a Junkers Ju-52/3mte of Eurasia, was attacked by 3 Japanese fighters on a delivery flight near Kunming on October 26, 1940. The plane made a forced landing in a rice field and was strafed, but both occupants survived.[8]
On 29 October 1940, the same DC-2 involved in the previous shootdown incident as Kweilin, now renamed Chungking, operated by CNAC, was destroyed by Japanese fighters at Changyi Airfield, Yunnan, China, after it made a scheduled landing and was coming to a stop.[9] Nine people died, including the American pilot Walter "Foxie" Kent and Chinese architect Chang-Kan Chien. The plane caught fire and never flew again.
La Verrier
La Verrier, an Air FranceSNCAC NC.223.4 mail plane, disappeared on the first leg of a flight from Marseille to Damascus with stopovers in Bizerte and Beirut on November 24, 1940. All 7 on board, including Jean Chiappe, are presumed to have died. No wreckage has been recovered, the plane radioed they were hit by machine-gun fire before disappearing; it has been theorized they were shot down in the nearby Battle of Cape Spartivento that occurred on the same day.[10]
KNILM PK-AFW
PK-AFW, a Douglas DC-3-194C of KNILM, was attacked by Japanese military aircraft on January 24, 1942, during a cargo flight. The plane made a forced landing near Samarinda and all 3 occupants survived, but the plane was written off.[11]
The Circe (G-AETZ), another Short S.23 Empire operated by Qantas (leased from BOAC), was evacuating civilians and military personnel from Tjilatjap to Broome on February 28, 1942, was shot down 400 km (248.5 miles) south of Tjilatjap by a Japanese bomber on maritime patrol from Denpasar. All 22 occupants, 4 crew and 18 passengers, were killed.[13]
PK-AFV, also known as the PH-ALP Pelikaan (one of the KLM airliners that diverted during the German invasion of the Netherlands), was a Douglas DC-3 airliner operated by KNILM from 1940. On 3 March 1942, while on a flight from Bandung, Netherlands East Indies, to Broome, Australia, with the well-known KLM captain Ivan Smirnov, the plane was attacked by three Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter planes; PK-AFV successfully landed on the beach near Broome with damage and an engine fire but was then strafed and the flight engineer and three passengers (including a baby) were killed. Smirnov had a consignment of diamonds, worth at the time an estimated £150,000–300,000 (in 2024 an approximate £9–19 million), in his possession. The vast majority of these were lost or stolen following the crash.[14][15]
KNILM PK-ALO
PK-ALO, another Douglas DC-3 of KNILM, was also attacked on March 3, 1942. While landing at Broome, Japanese A6M fighters fired at the aircraft. Pilot E.E. Hulsebos landed safely but the fighters attacked again, causing the aircraft to burn out; no one onboard was killed.[16]
LATI I-BURA
I-BURA, a Savoia-Marchetti SM-75 of LATI, was shot down near Sicily on March 28, 1942. It is unknown who shot down the plane and if there were any fatalities.[17]
Air France F-AREJ
F-AREJ, an Air France Lioré-et-Olivier H.246.1, was attacked by RAFHawker Hurricanes on a passenger flight from Marseille to Algiers on August 13, 1942. The damaged aircraft managed to arrive at Algiers harbor but sank after landing. 4 passengers were killed.[18]
LATI I-TELO
I-TELO, another Savoia-Marchetti SM-75 of LATI, was shot down on a military flight from Tunis to Castelvetrano on November 15, 1942, killing all 4 on board. It is unknown who shot down the plane.[19]
I-BONI, another Savoia-Marchetti SM-75 of LATI, was shot down on April 10, 1943. The location, fatalities (if any), and who shot down the plane is unknown.[21]
LATI I-MAST
I-MAST, another Savoia-Marchetti SM-75 of LATI, was shot down by RAF fighters on April 13, 1943, during a passenger flight over the Mediterranean. It is unknown if anyone died.[22]
LATI I-MONC
I-MONC, another Savoia-Marchetti SM-75 of LATI, was shot down by enemy fighters on April 19, 1943, during a passenger flight over the Mediterranean. It is unknown if anyone died.[23]
The Gripen (registered SE-BAG) was a Douglas DC-3 which was attacked by a GermanJunkers Ju 88 fighter-bomber over the coast of the island of Hållö, Sweden on 22 October 1943 while flying a scheduled passenger flight from Aberdeen to Stockholm.
A ditching at sea was attempted but the aircraft flew against the cliffs and crashed. Of the fifteen occupants, two survived, the flight-engineer and a passenger, after they were thrown out of the rear part of the aircraft.[26]
Deutsche Lufthansa D-AOCA
D-AOCA, a Junkers Ju-52/3m of Deutsche Lufthansa, was shot down on April 17, 1944, during an Allied fighter sweep of Belgrade, Yugoslavia (now Serbia). The plane was on scheduled service E.17 from Vienna to Athens with stops in Belgrade, Sofia, and Thessaloniki. The plane caught fire after being hit from the rear and starboard, crashing in Alt-Pasua, 26 km (16.1 miles) north of Semlin; 5 of the 7 occupants were killed.[27]
Friedrich Dahmen (D-ASHE), a Junkers Ju-52/3m of Deutsche Lufthansa, had to make a forced landing in Komárom County, Hungary, after being attacked by British Mosquito fighters during a passenger flight on October 17, 1944. Of the 9 occupants, 1 passenger was killed.[29]
Deutsche Lufthansa D-ARHW
D-ARHW, a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 of Deutsche Lufthansa, was shot down by a German patrol boat at 10:25 on November 29, 1944, off Målkläppen, Sweden, on a passenger flight from Berlin to Stockholm. All 10 occupants were killed.[30]
Dai Nippon Koku KK J-BKOV
J-BKOV, a Nakajima L2D of Dai Nippon Koku KK, was shot down on a flight to Taipei on March 5, 1945. It is unknown who shot down the plane, where it departed from, and if anyone died.[31]
Deutsche Lufthansa D-ANAJ
D-ANAJ, a Junkers Ju-52/3m of Deutsche Lufthansa, was shot down by the Soviets during an evacuation flight on April 20, 1945, in the forest at Glienig. Of the 20 occupants (3 crew and 17 passengers, including a woman), only 2 passengers survived. Among the dead was film director Hans Steinhoff. This plane was the last Deutsche Lufthansa flight to leave Berlin before WW2 ended, headed for Enns with a stop in Prague.[32]
Pan Am 1948 incident
On April 29, 1948, a Pan Am Douglas DC-3A (registration unknown) was shot at by riflemen shortly after takeoff from San Jose, Costa Rica, with several bullets hitting the fuselage, a tire blowing out, and a propeller being hit. Despite this substantial damage, the plane safely continued to its destination and was later repaired. All 12 occupants survived. A communist leader who was a passenger on the flight is suspected to have been the attackers' target.[33]
Pacific Overseas Airlines HS-PC103
HS-PC103, a Douglas C-47 of Thai airline Pacific Overseas Airlines, is believed to have been shot down off the west coast of Sumatra by Dutch pilots on October 25, 1948. The plane's route and fatality count (if any) is unknown.[34]
Aigle Azur F-OABJ
F-OABJ, a Douglas C-47 of Aigle Azur, crashed during a passenger flight (route unknown) near Đông Khê, present-day Vietnam, on November 27, 1949. All 10 occupants were killed. It is speculated that the plane was shot down by the Viet Minh during a supply-drop flight.[35]
1950s
Air Liban LR-AAN
On July 24, 1950, LR-AAN, a Douglas C-47A-40-DL of Air Liban, was shot at by an IsraeliSpitfire on a flight from Jerusalem to Beirut over the Israel-Lebanon border area. The plane landed safely despite substantial damage and was later repaired. Of the 28 occupants, 3 passengers were killed.[36]
Air France F-BELI
F-BELI, a Douglas C-54 of Air France, was shot at by 2 Soviet MiG-15 on April 29, 1952, near Berlin. The aircraft was hit 89 times, wounding 3 passengers and forcing engines no. 3 and 4 to be shut down. The plane made a safe landing at Berlin-Tempelhof and was later repaired. Soviets claimed the C-54 had strayed out of the international air corridor.[37]
STAEO F-BEIB
F-BEIB, a Douglas C-47 of Société des Transports Aériens d'Extrême-Orient (STAEO), was shot down by communist guerrillas during a passenger flight take off in Phan Thiet on May 4, 1952. Of the 14 occupants, only 1 crew member was killed. The plane was written off.[38]
Philippine Air Lines PI-C38
PI-C38, a Douglas DC-3 of Philippine Air Lines, was on a passenger flight from Laoag to Aparri on December 30, 1952, when an armed man forced himself into the cockpit shortly after takeoff. The man, armed with a .45 pistol, demanded to be taken to Amoy, China. The captain put the plane into a dive, but the hijacker kept his balance and fatally shot him. The co-pilot regained control of the aircraft, and the plane's steward was fatally shot through the cockpit door when he came up to see what was happening. The co-pilot flew towards China over the China Sea at 6,000 feet until a pair of Chinese NationalistT-6 Harvard aircraft appeared, spraying machine gun fire at the DC-3 over Chinmen Island. The plane turned back and was forced to land at Quemoy by more Chinese Nationalist aircraft; the hijacker was arrested upon landing. The captain and steward were the only fatalities of the 10 occupants.[39]
Aeroflot 1953 shootdown
On July 27, 1953, an Ilyushin Il-12 (registration unknown) of Aeroflot was shot at in North Korean airspace flying from Port Arthur to Vladivostok and crashed onto Chinese territory at 12:30, killing all 21 occupants. The plane was spotted by USAF Capt. Ralph S. Parr Jr. in his F-86F Sabre during an escort mission near Chunggang-jin; Parr made several passes and mistakenly identified the aircraft as North Korean. In downing the IL-12 he obtained double-ace status. One long burst brought down the plane, which crashed 4 km (2.5 miles) from Mao-erh-shan in what was the final aircraft shot down before the armistice was signed later the same day.[40][41]
TI-1022, a Curtiss C-46 Commando of Aerolineas Nacionales, left San Jose, Costa Rica, at 06:21 on June 1, 1959, for a farm airstrip near Volcán, Panama, to carry a meat shipment to Curaçao. Instead of landing at Volcán, however, the plane landed at an unknown location in Costa Rica and was boarded by armed guerrillas and left for Nicaragua to take part in the uprising against President Luis Somoza. The plane was shot down by a Nicaraguan Air Force P-51 and crashed into Nicaraguan territory, killing all on board. Apart from the 2 crew, the number of passengers is unknown.[48]
Aeroflot Flight 902 was a Tupolev Tu-104 flight on scheduled domestic service from Khabarovsk to Moscow. On 30 June 1962, its wreckage was found 28 km (17 mi) east of Krasnoyarsk Airport, in flat terrain. There were no survivors.[49] An entry hole, with signs of fire damage on the cabin side of the fuselage, was consistent with that which could be caused by an anti-aircraft missile, and there was an unofficial confirmation that an anti-aircraft missile had gone astray during an air defense exercise in the area.[49]
1965: Air Vietnam XV-NIC
XV-NIC, a Douglas C-47 of Air Vietnam, was shot down by communist ground fire on a domestic passenger flight from Quang Ngai to Saigon on September 16, 1965, 11 km (6.9 miles) northeast of Quang Ngai. All 39 on board were killed, including 1 passenger who was found alive but died in a hospital.[50]
F-BELV, a Boeing S.307B-1 Stratoliner of Compagnie Internationale de Transports Civil Aériens (CITCA) operating for the International Commission for Supervision and Control (ICSC), disappeared near Hanoi on October 18, 1965, with all 13 onboard presumed dead. The plane was carrying 4 French crew members and 9 ICSC members from Vientiane to Hanoi, departing at 15:05 and contacting Hanoi at 15:20, giving an ETA of 16:44, but no further radio contact was received. French and Canadian forces searched in Laos, being refused permission in North Vietnam with North Vietnamese authorities reporting they could not find the plane either. In 1996, a study by the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade concluded the plane had likely been shot down by a North Vietnamese military unit, accidentally or deliberately.[53]
1969: Pan African Airlines N3924C
N3934C, a Douglas C-54 of Pan African Airlines, was hit by an anti-aircraft shell at 15:23 on April 25, 1969. Descending at 6500 feet into Enugu from Lagos, the shell left a 5-foot hole on the starboard side and injured 5 passengers. The plane turned back to Lagos due to undercarriage issues and made a safe landing after the undercarriage made a free fall extension. The aircraft was later repaired.[54]
1970s
1970: Alitalia Flight 713
Alitalia Flight 713, operated by Douglas DC-8-43 I-DIWL, was approaching Syrian airspace after takeoff from Tehran on June 26, 1970, and was told that Syrian airspace had been closed. The pilot requested vectors to Beirut, and was told to fly to Damascus and turn to Beirut from there. While at FL295 6.5 km (4.1 miles) east of Damascus, an air-to-air missile made direct contact with the left wing. The plane went down 3250 feet and the pilot turned off the no. 1 engine, landing safely at Beirut; all 94 occupants survived. At the time of the missile strike, several EgyptianMiG-21 and Israeli Mirage IIICJ were fighting over Syria with some SyrianMiG-17 also being reported present.[55]
1972: Royal Air Lao XW-TDE
XW-TDE, a Douglas C-54 of Royal Air Lao, disappeared on a flight from Savannakhet to Vientiane on February 11, 1972, with all 23 onboard presumed dead. The last radio contact was made with Bangkok Regional Control Center at 13:20, reportedly over the SH point with ETA given as 14:22. The plane was reportedly shot down.[56]
Libyan Airlines Flight 114 was a regularly scheduled flight from Tripoli, Libya, via Benghazi to Cairo. At 10:30 on 21 February 1973, the Boeing 727 operating the flight left Tripoli, but became lost due to a combination of bad weather and equipment failure over northern Egypt around 13:44 (local time). It entered Israeli-controlled airspace over the Sinai Peninsula, where was intercepted by two Israeli Air ForceMcDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II fighters, refused to land, and was shot down. Of the 113 people on board, five survived, including the co-pilot.[57][58]
Korean Air Lines Flight 902 was scheduled flight from Paris, France bound for Seoul, South Korea with a stopover at Anchorage, Alaska operated by a civilian Boeing 707 airliner (registered HL7429) that was shot down by Soviet Air ForceSukhoi Su-15 fighters on 20 April 1978 near Murmansk, Soviet Union after it violated Soviet airspace and failed to respond to Soviet interceptors. Two passengers died in the incident. 107 passengers and crew survived after the plane made an emergency landing on a frozen lake.[62]
Air Rhodesia Flight 825 was a scheduled flight between Kariba and Salisbury, Rhodesia (now Harare, Zimbabwe), that was shot down on 3 September 1978, by Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA) guerrillas using a Soviet-manufactured Strela 2 missile. Eighteen of the 56 passengers of the Vickers Viscount survived the crash, but 10 of the survivors were killed by the guerrillas at the crash site.
Air Rhodesia Flight 827 was a scheduled flight between Kariba and Salisbury that was shot down on 12 February 1979, by ZIPRA guerrillas using a Soviet-manufactured Strela 2 missile in similar circumstances to Flight RH825 five months earlier. None of the 59 passengers or crew of the Vickers Viscount survived.[63]
On 27 June 1980 a McDonnell Douglas DC-9-15 operated by Itavia broke up mid-air and crashed into the Tyrrhenian Sea near the island of Ustica, while en route from Bologna to Palermo, Italy. All 81 people on board were killed. The cause has been the subject of a decades-long controversy and numerous conspiracy theories. One theory is that the DC-9 was accidentally shot down during a clandestine air battle possibly involving American, French, Italian and Libyan military aircraft. Others state that the plane was bombed by terrorists, or that it was deliberately shot down by French or Israeli forces who mistook it for a different aircraft. In January 2013, Italy's highest court ruled there was clear evidence that the flight was shot down by a missile, but the court did not identify the perpetrators nor detail the circumstances; the ambiguous ruling together with the deaths of key figures surrounding the event have further fueled the controversy.[64]
1980: Linhas Aéreas de Angola Yakovlev Yak-40
On 8 June 1980 Linhas Aéreas de Angola airliner (registered D2-TYC), a Yakovlev Yak-40, was shot down near Matala, Angola with the loss of all on board (4 crew and 15 passengers). ICAO reported that a "sudden situation took place in response to actions by a foreign aircraft and accidentally the Yak-40 was hit and crashed".[65] Unconfirmed reports mention the possible involvement of a ZambianShenyang J-6 fighter.[66][67]
On 18 July 1981 Transporte Aéreo Rioplatense's Canadair CL-44 commercial cargo aircraft involved in the clandestine weapons supplies under the Iran-Contra affair was taken down by a Soviet AirforceSu-15 by a ram attack. The Argentinian airliner that returned from Tehran to Larnaca, Cyprus was supposed to fly in Turkish airspace along the Soviet border but deviated and appeared over Soviet Armenia. After the pilot of a Su-15 interceptor failed to force the Canadair CL-44 to land in the USSR, and realizing that the intruder was escaping, the pilot hit the Canadair's tail causing both planes to crash near Erevan. The Soviet pilot ejected but the TAR crew died.[68]
On 11 June 1987, a Bakhtar Afghan Airlines Antonov An-26 (registered YA-BAL) was shot down by a missile near Khost, killing 53 out of the 55 people on board. The aircraft had been on a flight from Kandahar to Kabul.[73]
Iran Air Flight 655 was a commercial flight operated by Iran Air that regularly flew from Bandar Abbas, Iran to Dubai, UAE. On 3 July 1988 the aircraft was shot down by the U.S. Navyguided missile cruiserUSS Vincennes which fired a RIM-66 Standard surface-to-air missile. The airplane was destroyed between Bandar Abbas and Dubai; all 290 passengers and crew died, including 66 children. USS Vincennes was in Iranian waters at the time of the attack. IR655, an Airbus A300 on an ascending flight path, was mistaken by Vincennes as a descending Iranian Grumman F-14 Tomcat.[77]
1988: Ariana Afghan Airlines shootdown
On 19 November 1988, an Antonov An-26 operated by Ariana Afghan Airlines was flying from Kabul, Afghanistan to Jalalabad, Afghanistan when the pilot became lost due to a technical issue.[78] The aircraft entered Pakistani airspace when the pilot asked for help from a nearby airport in Pakistan. It was subsequently shot down by ground fire from the Pakistan Air Force near Parachinar, Pakistan resulting in 30 deaths.[78]Ministry of Defence of Pakistan claimed that the aircraft was shot down by ground fire when it entered Pakistani territory and failed to identify itself.[78]
In September 1993, two airliners belonging to Transair Georgia and a third belong to Orbi Georgia were shot down by missiles and gunfire in Sukhumi, Abkhazia, Georgia. The first, a Tupolev Tu-134, was shot down on 21 September 1993 by a missile during landing approach. The second plane, a Tupolev Tu-154, was shot down a day later also during approach. A third one was shelled and destroyed on the ground, while passengers were boarding.[83][84][85]
Lionair Flight 602, an Antonov An-24, crashed into the sea off the north-western coast of Sri Lanka on 29 September 1998. The aircraft departed Jaffna-Palaly Air Force Base on a flight to Colombo and disappeared from radar screens just after the pilot had reported depressurization. Initial reports indicated that the plane had been shot down by Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebels with a missile. All 7 crew and 48 passengers died.[86]
On 20 April 2001, a Cessna A185E floatplane (registered OB-1408) was shot down by a Peruvian Cessna A-37B Dragonfly attack aircraft over the border Mariscal Ramón Castilla Province of Peru. Two out of four passengers on board were killed, American Christian missionary Roni Bowers and her infant daughter Charity, while the pilot Kevin Donaldson was severely wounded. The incident took place during the Air Bridge Denial Program, where the floatplane was spotted by a CIA surveillance aircraft, who requested that the Peruvian Air Force follow the floatplane and force it to land at Iquitos to be searched for illegal drugs. After failing to contact the floatplane due to the message being sent on the wrong frequency, the CIA observers advised against a shootdown due to the floatplane not matching the expected behavior seen in drug trafficking aircraft, only for the Peruvian Dragonfly to open fire, downing the floatplane.
A year later, the US government paid compensation of $8 million to the Bowers family and the pilot.[88]
On 4 October 2001, Siberian Airlines Flight 1812, a Tupolev Tu-154, crashed over the Black Sea en route from Tel Aviv, Israel to Novosibirsk, Russia. Although the immediate suspicion was of a terrorist attack, American sources proved that the plane was hit by a S-200 surface-to-air missile, fired from the Crimean Peninsula during a joint Ukrainian-Russian military exercise, and this was confirmed by the Moscow-based Interstate Aviation Committee. All on board (66 passengers and 12 crew) died. The President of UkraineLeonid Kuchma and several high commanders of the military expressed their condolences to the relatives of the victims. The Ukrainian Government paid out $200,000 in compensation to the families of every passenger and crew who died when the plane crashed; a total of $15 million in compensation for the accident.[89]
On 22 November 2003, a DHL Airbus A300-200F cargo aircraft (registered OO-DLL) was struck on the left wing by a surface-to-air missile shortly after takeoff from Baghdad bound for Muharraq, Bahrain. The aircraft lost all hydraulic controls and the crew had to use engine thrust to maneuver. The pilots managed to return to Baghdad International Airport but lost directional control on landing, resulting in a runway excursion. All 3 people on board survived. The A300 did not fly again after the incident and was scrapped.[citation needed]
On 25 December 2024, an Azerbaijan AirlinesEmbraer 190 (registered 4K-AZ65) crashed while attempting an emergency landing at Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan. Azerbaijani officials told Reuters that preliminary results indicate the plane was struck by a Russian Pantsir-S air defence system.[103]Associated Press subsequently reported that aviation experts believe it was likely shot at and struck by Russian air defences near its destination Grozny.[104] The airliner was denied an emergency landing in Russia, and instead guided over the Caspian Sea.[105]ADS-B data obtained by Flightradar24 showed the crippled aircraft experienced variable altitude of ±8,000 feet for at least 75 minutes, with photos from the crash site showing puncture damage to the vertical and horizontal stabilizers.[106] Videos from onboard depicted shrapnel penetrating the cabin, injuring passengers, puncturing life vests, and causing the cabin to depressurise.[107] Out of the 67 passengers and crew onboard, 38 died, including both pilots.[108]
^Powell, J.W. (1 March 1941). The China Monthly Review (Vols. 94-95 ed.). Millard Publishing House. p. 462. The 12-ton plane "Chungking" formerly was the plane, "Kweilin," which was shot down by the Japanese in 1938
^Commission fédérale d'enquête sur les accidents d'aviation (31 August 1990). "Accident report"(PDF) (in French). Archived from the original(PDF) on 30 May 2016.
^"Under pressure, Iran admits it shot down jetliner by mistake". AP NEWS. January 11, 2020. Hajizadeh said Guard forces ringing the capital had beefed up their air defenses and were at the "highest level of readiness," fearing that the U.S. would retaliate. He said he suggested Tehran should close its airspace but no action was taken... He said the airline's pilot and crew had done nothing wrong, but an officer made the "bad decision" to open fire on the plane after mistaking it for a cruise missile.
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Сельское поселение России (МО 2-го уровня)Новотитаровское сельское поселение Флаг[d] Герб 45°14′09″ с. ш. 38°58′16″ в. д.HGЯO Страна Россия Субъект РФ Краснодарский край Район Динской Включает 4 населённых пункта Адм. центр Новотитаровская Глава сельского пос�...
Champs-Élysées stage in the Tour de FranceFinal stage on the Champs-Élysées in 2015VenueChamps-ÉlyséesLocationParis, FranceAlso known asFinal stage of the Tour de FranceTypeCycling stage raceOrganised byAmaury Sport OrganisationInaugural winnerWalter Godefroot (1975)Won most timesMark Cavendish (4)RouteEnter Paris then, six-to-eight times: Rue de RivoliPlace de la ConcordeUp the Champs-ÉlyséesAround the Arc de TriompheDown the Champs-Élyséesles Tuileries and the LouvrePlace de la C...
1986 Indian filmKaliyuga PandavuluPosterDirected byK. Raghavendra RaoScreenplay byK. Raghavendra RaoStory byParuchuri brothersProduced byD. RamanaiduStarringVenkateshKhushbuCinematographyK. S. Prakash RaoEdited byK. A. MarthandMusic byChakravarthyProductioncompanySuresh ProductionsRelease date 14 August 1986 (1986-08-14) Running time151 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageTelugu Kaliyuga Pandavulu (transl. Pandavas of Kaliyuga) is a 1986 Indian Telugu-language masala film produce...
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. You may improve this article, discuss the issue on the talk page, or create a new article, as appropriate. (February 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message) German students demonstrating fighting homophobia Children and adults participating in a pride parade in Miami Beach Historically speaking, lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people have not been given equal treatment and...
UFC mixed martial arts event in 2019 UFC 240: Holloway vs. EdgarThe poster for UFC 240: Holloway vs. EdgarInformationPromotionUltimate Fighting ChampionshipDateJuly 27, 2019 (2019-07-27)VenueRogers PlaceCityEdmonton, Alberta, CanadaAttendance12,144[1]Total gate$1.4 million[1]Event chronology UFC on ESPN: dos Anjos vs. Edwards UFC 240: Holloway vs. Edgar UFC on ESPN: Covington vs. Lawler UFC 240: Holloway vs. Edgar was a mixed martial arts event produced by the U...
For the local government elections scheduled to be held in November, see 2026 South Australian local elections. 2026 South Australian state election ← 2022 21 March 2026 2030 → All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly24 seats are needed for a majority11 (of the 22) seats in the South Australian Legislative CouncilOpinion polls Leader Peter Malinauskas David Speirs Party Labor Liberal Leader since 9 April 2018 19 April 2022 Leader's se...
6°05′N 116°30′E / 6.083°N 116.500°E / 6.083; 116.500 Lokasi Pantai Barat Bagian Pantai Barat Sabah terletak di barat laut negara bagian Sabah. Dengan luas 7.588 km persegi, ia merupakan 10,3 % dari luas Sabah, dengan kira-kira 30 % dari jumlah populasi Sabah. Bagian ini terbagi kepada beberapa distrik iaitu seperti berikut. Ranau Papar Penampang Kota Kinabalu Tuaran Kota Belud Putatan lbs Sabah Negeri di Bawah BayuTopik Sejarah Perang Saudara Brunei P...
Stasiun Ichigaya市ヶ谷駅Peron Stasiun Ichigaya JR, 2015LokasiPrefekturTokyo(Lihat stasiun lainnya di Tokyo)KotaTokyoDistrik kotaChiyodaSejarahDibuka1895Layanan kereta apiOperatorJR EastTokyo MetroToei SubwayJalurJalur Chūō-SōbuJalur Tokyo Metro YurakuchoJalur Tokyo Metro NambokuJalur Toei Shinjuku Stasiun Ichigaya (市ヶ谷駅code: ja is deprecated , Ichigaya-eki) adalah stasiun kereta di Chiyoda, Tokyo, Jepang. Stasiun ini telah beroperasi sejak 6 Maret 1895.[1] Layanan Jalur...
Religions in the Netherlands (15+ population) (2023)[1] No religion (58%) Catholicism (17%) Protestantism (13%) Islam (6%) Other (6%) St. Martin's Cathedral in Utrecht. Religion in the Netherlands was dominated by Christianity between the 10th and 20th centuries. In the late 19th century, roughly 60% of the population was Calvinist and 35% was Catholic. Also, during the Holocaust, there was a big Jewish population. Since then, t...
Robert O. Blake, Jr. Duta Besar Amerika Serikat untuk Indonesia Masa jabatan30 Januari 2014 – 18 Juli 2016PresidenBarack ObamaPendahuluScot MarcielPenggantiJoseph R. Donovan Jr. Sunting kotak info • L • B Robert Orris Blake, Jr. adalah diplomat karier asal Amerika Serikat dan kini menjadi Duta Besar Amerika Serikat untuk Indonesia sejak November 2013. Dia sebelumnya menjabat sebagai Asisten Menteri Luar Negeri untuk Asia Selatan dan urusan Asia Tengah pada periode 200...
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia's content policies, particularly neutral point of view. Please discuss further on the talk page. (June 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message) This article needs additional citations for verificat...
1976 single by Aretha Franklin Something He Can FeelOne of A-side labels of the U.S. vinyl singleSingle by Aretha Franklinfrom the album Music from the Warner Bros. Picture Sparkle B-sideLoving You BabyReleasedMay 5, 1976RecordedApril 1976StudioCurtom (Chicago, Illinois)GenreSoul[1]Length6:21 (album)3:25 (single)LabelAtlanticSongwriter(s)Curtis MayfieldProducer(s)Curtis MayfieldAretha Franklin singles chronology You (1976) Something He Can Feel (1976) Jump / Hooked On Your Love(1976) ...