Russia accused of downing Azerbaijan passenger plane

Anti-aircraft fire may have caused plane to crash in Kazakhstan on Christmas Day, according to US and regional officials

The aircraft crashed while making an attempt to land in Aktau in Kazakhstan after flying east across the Caspian Sea. Photograph: The Administration of Mangystau Region via AP
The aircraft crashed while making an attempt to land in Aktau in Kazakhstan after flying east across the Caspian Sea. Photograph: The Administration of Mangystau Region via AP

Russian anti-aircraft fire could have caused a plane to crash in Kazakhstan on Christmas Day, according to US and regional officials.

The Azerbaijan Airlines flight was en route from Azerbaijan’s capital Baku to Grozny in Chechnya, southern Russia, when it diverted and crash-landed in Kazakhstan, killing 38 people. Twenty-nine passengers survived.

Most of those on the plane, an Embraer 190, were Azerbaijani citizens. There were also 16 Russians aboard and several citizens of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

In preliminary official reports on Wednesday, Russia said that heavy fog had forced the plane to divert from its planned landing in Grozny and seek to land in Kazakhstan, where it crashed after probably hitting a flock of birds. On the same day, Azerbaijan’s president said he had been told the plane had been diverted due to poor weather conditions.

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The crash site in Aktau. Photograph: Administration of Mangystau Region/AP
The crash site in Aktau. Photograph: Administration of Mangystau Region/AP

But that was questioned by experts and officials in the US, the region and Ukraine, who cited evidence that Russian air defences were operating over Grozny at the time in response to a Ukrainian drone strike. They also cited images of what appeared to be shrapnel damage on the inside and tail of the wrecked plane.

A US official said there were early indications that a Russian anti-aircraft system might have struck the plane. If this was the case, the incident would further underscore Moscow’s recklessness since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the official added.

Andriy Kovalenko, a Ukrainian national security and defence council official, posted on Telegram: “Russia was supposed to close the airspace over Grozny, but did not do so ... The plane was damaged by the Russians and sent to Kazakhstan, instead of making an emergency landing in Grozny and saving people’s lives.”

Senior Ukrainian officials confirmed to the Financial Times that Kyiv believed the plane was most probably hit by Russian air defence systems.

Osprey, an aviation security agency, said: “Follow-on video of the wreckage and the circumstances around the airspace security environment in southwest Russia indicate the possibility the aircraft was hit by some form of anti-aircraft fire.”

Footage of the Azerbaijan Airlines plane shows suspected shrapnel damage to the cabin and tail of the wrecked plane and along the fuselage

A senior official in the Caucasus region said evidence pointed to the plane being damaged by air defences over the Grozny area.

“If [Russian authorities are] going to use jamming systems and anti-aircraft systems, they should have closed the airspace,” the official told the Financial Times. “The most benign explanation for why they did not do so is incompetence.”

If the investigation, which is being led by Kazakhstan officials, finds the plane was hit by air defence systems, the incident would recall the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 in 2014. The crash, which killed 298 people, was caused by a missile launched by Russian-controlled proxy fighters in eastern Ukraine, an investigation concluded.

Data from the Flightradar24 tracking service shows that the Azerbaijan plane stopped registering its position continuously once it reached the north Caucasus area, suggesting that GPS was being jammed.

However, Flightradar24 found some identifying information was available that showed the plane had made it as far as Grozny before changing course for Kazakhstan.

A rescuer searches the wreckage of the aircraft. Photograph: Kazakhstan’s Emergency Ministry Press Service/AP
A rescuer searches the wreckage of the aircraft. Photograph: Kazakhstan’s Emergency Ministry Press Service/AP

Images from the crash site show much of the plane’s front half was destroyed, but a large part of the tail remained intact. The tail appears to be covered with impact marks and small punctures that could be consistent with a strike by a surface-to-air missile defence system, according to military experts.

“The holes in the fuselage are very similar to the impact of the kind of projectiles that air-to-air missiles tend to be equipped [with], as well as the anti-aircraft missiles launched by air defence systems such as the Pantsir-S1,” said Ruslan Leviev, a military analyst and head of the Conflict Intelligence Team, an open-source investigations group.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was premature to speculate on the causes of the crash. Authorities in Kazakhstan said it was “unethical” to blame missile fire before the investigation had concluded.

A national security council spokesperson said the US has seen the reports but referred reporters to Azerbaijani and Kazakhstani officials as the investigation continued.

— Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024