Iranian Plane Crashes After Take Off, Death Toll Unclear

At least 39 people were killed on Sunday when an Iran-140 Sepahan Air passenger plane crashed after takeoff from Tehran's Mehrabad airport on a flight to Tabas in northeast Iran, according to The Associated Press.

Initial reports said that all of the 48 passengers and crew had been killed, but state media later reported that some passengers had been injured and transferred to hospital, the AP reported.

Islamic Republic News Agency said that eight or nine had survived and quoted a doctor as saying that one of the injured had regained consciousness, according to the AP.

Iran's airlines have been plagued by crashes, which Iranian politicians blame on international sanctions that block the airlines from replacing their aging fleets, the AP reported.

About 14 crashes involving Iranian planes were reported in the decade to January 2011, according to the AP.

President Hassan Rouhani ordered a halt to all flights of the Iran-140 pending full investigation, IRNA said, the AP reported.

The pilot detected technical issues four minutes after takeoff and tried to return to the airport, state television said, but the twin-engine turboprop crashed on a road at 9.18 am local time, according to the AP.

State television said 37 people died instantly, two died on the way to hospital and nine others were undergoing medical treatment, the AP reported.

The Civil Aviation Authority said the passengers included two infants and three children under the age of 12, IRNA reported, according to the AP. Mashallah Shakibi, 63, a former member of parliament from Tabas was among the fatalities, according to reports from the Iranian state news channel IRINN.

A photograph on IRNA's website showed a huge plume of black smoke billowing over traffic standing at a road intersection, the AP reported. A photograph from the Iranian Student News Agency showed a charred tail fin lying on the ground.

The plane's black box was found according to IRNA reports. Authorities are investigating the cause of the crash, according to the AP.

For years, planes have been kept in service through parts imported on the black market, cannibalized from other planes or reproduced locally, aviation sources say, the AP reported. Iran's four largest carriers: Iran Air, Iran Aseman Airlines, Mahan Air and Iran Air Tours, and all have average fleet ages above 22 years, Iranian media have reported. They serve a market of 76 million people.

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