Sudan's struggling government loses top officials in plane crash
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| Khartoum, Sudan
A Sudanese helicopter carrying a government delegation crashed in a mountainous southern region on Sunday, killing all 32 people on board including a Cabinet minister, a former presidential adviser, two generals, and a TV crew.
The delegation was travelling aboard a chartered helicopter to the volatile South Kordofan state to attend prayers on the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.
The helicopter went down "due to harsh weather conditions" near Talodi, a small town about 406 miles southwest of the capital, Khartoum, state-run news agency SUNA said.
A Sudanese official said the aircraft slammed into a mountain just before it was to land in Talodi, as seasonal heavy rains in the region left the pilots with "zero visibility." The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media.
He said a search team that reached the site of the crash was having trouble identifying the victims as many bodies had been charred and torn to pieces.
The office of聽Sudan's聽President Omar al-Bashir released a list of all 26 passengers and six crew members who perished in the crash.
Minister of Endowment Ghadi al-Sadeq and a former adviser to President al-Bashir, Makki Balayela, were on the list, as were the two generals and other officials. A four-member TV crew from聽Sudan's聽state television also died in the crash.
Sudan聽has a poor aviation safety record, with a large number of jet accidents occurring on landing. In late 2010, a plane carrying 36 people crashed on landing in聽Sudan's聽western Darfur region, killing at least two people.
And in May 2008 鈥 before South聽Sudan聽became a separate country 鈥 a plane crash in a remote area in the south killed 24 people, including key members of the regional southern Sudanese government.
Five years earlier, a聽Sudan聽Airways Boeing 737 en route from Port聽Sudan聽to Khartoum crashed soon after takeoff, killing all 115 people on board.