SHOTLIST
AP
Television
++
NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Wide of plane, pan to emergency services working at site
2.
Various of teams working on the plane
3. SOUNDBITE: (
Spanish)
Roberto Kriete,
Chief Executive Officer of
TACA Airlines:
"The fact that we, somehow, failed and that lives got lost in our company brings us a lot of sadness and really brings up a feeling of solidarity towards the families of those people who are no longer with this company."
4.
Cutaway of presser ++
MUTE++
5. Cutaway of cameramen ++MUTE++
6. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Roberto Kriete, Chief Executive Officer of TACA Airlines:
"A
TACA pilot needs to be very experienced to be allowed to fly to
Toncontin Airport. He must be a pilot with special training, continuous training every six months so he can fly to and from
Toncontin, which is a difficult, a complicated airport."
7. Exterior of headquarters of
Central American Bank for
Economic Integration
8. Various of people mourning the bank's president who died in plane crash
9. Various of
President of Honduras Manuel Zelaya at funeral wake ++MUTE++
++
DAY SHOTS++
10. Pan from road to crash scene
11. Various of soldiers at the site of accident
12. Various of airport and TACA counters
STORYLINE:
An investigation begun on Saturday into a commercial jetliner crash that killed five people and injured 65 in
Honduras.
Aviation authorities banned additional flights from landing at the capital
Tegucigalpa's notoriously dangerous airport.
Roberto Kriete, chief executive officer of the airline, TACA, said investigators from
France,
El Salvador and the US would arrive "in the coming hours" for inquiries which could last a month or more.
Kriete identified the dead from the plane as pilot
Salvadoran Cesare D'
Antonio, who had worked for TACA since
1993 and logged more than 11,
000 flight hours;
Nicaraguan citizen
Harry Brautigam, the head of a regional
development bank, who died of heart failure; and
Jeanne Chantal, wife of the Brazilian ambassador in Honduras,
Brian Michael Fraser Neele.
Fire Chief Carlos Cordero identified the other two victims as Honduran university students
Josue Aguilar Nunez, 21, and
Gustavo Trochez, 18, who were in one of three cars that were crushed by the airplane on a street next
to the runway.
The
Airbus A-320, operated by the Central American airliner
Grupo Taca, slid off the runway Friday morning on its second landing attempt.
The plane mowed down trees and smashed through a metal fence before coming to rest about 20 yards (metres) beyond the strip, its nosed smashed against a roadside embankment and its fuselage broken into three parts.
Honduras
President Manuel Zelaya issued a statement saying he lamented the accident.
The president closed Toncontin international airport for 48 hours to all traffic except helicopters and small aeroplanes with a maximum capacity of 42 passengers.
"A TACA pilot needs to be very experienced to be allowed to fly to Toncontin Airport. He must be a pilot with special training, continuous training every six months so he can fly to and from Toncontin, which is a difficult, a complicated airport," Kreite said.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 90