A hole seen Tuesday in a plane operated by Daallo Airlines on the
runway of the airport in Mogadishu, Somalia.
MOGADISHU, Somalia — A man was killed in an explosion on an Airbus A321 that made a hole in the fuselage and forced the plane to return to the Somali capital of Mogadishu to make an emergency landing, officials said on Wednesday.
Somalia's civil aviation director, Abdiwahid Omar, told the state radio website that a person was missing after the Daallo Airlines plane landed on Tuesday and that the body had been found.
"The investigation goes on," Omar said, without mentioning any explosion or what had forced the plane to return except to say there was a "sudden defect" reported by the captain.
Local authorities in the Balcad area, about 30 kilometers north of Mogadishu, said the body of a man, believed to have been sucked out of the plane, was found in the area.
A police officer at Mogadishu airport said, "The dead body of the passenger is being transported to Mogadishu." The officer, who asked not to be named, told Reuters the man was about 55 years old.
"He dropped when the explosion occurred in the plane," he said.
Daallo Airlines said on its Facebook page on Tuesday that the plane, operated by Hermes Airlines, took off from Mogadishu and was bound for Djibouti with 74 passengers on board before it "experienced an incident" that forced it to return.
It had said all the passengers were evacuated safely. The airline had no immediate additional comment on Wednesday.
A gaping hole in the commercial airliner forced it to make an emergency landing at Mogadishu's international airport late Tuesday, officials and witnesses said.
Mohamed Hussein, an agent for Daallo, had told Reuters on Tuesday that a "fire had exploded" and two passengers were slightly wounded.
The aviation website http://www.airlive.net said witnesses heard a loud bang. Images of the plane showed a hole in the fuselage over one of the wings.
Daallo flies to several destinations in the Horn of Africa and the Middle East, its website showed.
Posted By Charles D'Alberto