All 62 people aboard a passenger jet flying from Dubai to southern Russia have been killed when their plane crashed on its second attempt to land at Rostov-on-Don airport.Russia's emergencies ministry said the aircraft, a Boeing 737-800 operated by Dubai-based budget carrier Flydubai, crashed early on Saturday. Most of those on board were Russian."The aircraft hit the ground and broke into pieces," the Investigative Committee of Russia said in a statement on its website."According to preliminary data there were 55 passengers aboard and seven crew members. They all died."One of the flight recorders had been recovered, the committee said in a statement."Different versions of what happened are being looked into,
including crew error, a technical failure and bad weather conditions," the committee said.The Department of Foreign Affairs has confirmed no Australians were aboard the aircraft."We extend our condolences to the families of those involved in the Flydubai Boeing 737 plane crash which occurred in Rosov-on-Don, Russia," a DFAT spokesperson said in a statement.The plane came down inside the airport's perimeter, about 250m short of the start of the runway.The plane's wing hit the ground on its second attempt to land and burst into flames, the Rostov region's emergency ministry said in a statement.Grainy pictures from a security camera pointing towards the airport, which were broadcast on Russian television, showed a large explosion at ground level, with flames and sparks leaping high into the air.The crash occurred more than two hours after the plane, flight number FZ981, was scheduled to land.Flydubai said in a statement that the company was doing all it could to gather more information as quickly as possible."At this moment our thoughts and prayers are with our passengers and our crew who were on board the aircraft," said the government-owned airline.The crash is the budget airline's first since it started flying in May 2009. It last suffered a major safety incident when one of its planes was shot at while landing at Baghdad airport on January 27, 2015.Six of the crew were non-Russians, the Russian emergency ministry said in a statement on its website, but it did not reveal the citizenship of the crew or passengers aboard.Flydubi said in a statement that there were 44 Russians among the 55 passengers, eight Ukrainians, two Indians and one Uzbek. Four children were among the dead.Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered for assistance to be given to the relatives of those killed."The head of state said that now the main thing is to work with the families and the loved ones of those who had died," the Kremlin said in a statement on its website.Originally published as Plane crashes in Russia, all 62 killed
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