Six die after plane hits house in Chile
The plane plummeted after getting entangled in power lines shortly after take-off from La Paloma airport in Puerto Montt, a port city 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) to the south of the capital Santiago, said Harry Jurgensen, the governor of the Los Lagos region.
SANTIAGO: Six people died on Tuesday after a light aircraft crashed into a house in southern Chile, authorities said.
The plane plummeted after getting entangled in power lines shortly after take-off from La Paloma airport in Puerto Montt, a port city 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) to the south of the capital Santiago, said Harry Jurgensen, the governor of the Los Lagos region.
Local television pictures showed the house, which caught fire after being hit by the plane, completely gutted.
The plane´s tail could be seen on television images lying in the garden of the destroyed house.
Authorities did not reveal the identity of the victims but said the pilot was amongst the dead -- two women and four men.
No one was in the house when the plane hit.
The aircraft was owned by the "Archipielago" company, which operates commercial flights in a region that is difficult to access.
-
Minnesota man charged after $350m IRS tax scam exposed
-
Trump reached out to police chief investigating Epstein in 2006, records show
-
San Francisco 49ers player shot near post-Super Bowl party
-
Ransom deadline passes: FBI confirms ‘communication blackout’ in Nancy Guthrie abduction
-
Piers Morgan finally breaks silence on kidnapping of Savannah Guthrie's mother Nancy
-
Lenore Taylor resigns as Guardian Australia editor after decade-long tenure
-
Epstein case: Ghislaine Maxwell invokes Fifth, refuses to testify before US Congress
-
Savannah Guthrie receives massive support from Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Garner after desperate plea