An Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer E190 flying from the Azerbaijani capital Baku to Grozny, in Chechnya, crashed and caught fire at about 9:30am Moscow time at Aktau Airport in southwestern Kazakhstan on 25 December. The front of the plane burst into flames, while the tail remained intact, meaning 29 passengers escaped with their lives. There were 67 people on board in total.
The airline, as well as Russia’s civil aviation agency Rosaviatsia, originally said the crash was caused by a collision with a flock of birds, leading to a loss of navigation control.
But images of holes in the fuselage of the plane which crashed as it was flying from Baku to Grozny posted on social media shortly after the event occurred on Wednesday caused many bloggers and journalists to suggest that it had been hit by an anti-aircraft missile.
Experts including Friendly Avia Support Director Oleksandr Lanetskyi were quick to dismiss the bird story as “total nonsense” as more video evidence emerged from the crash site. “If birds come into contact with a plane, the worst thing that can happen is an engine shutdown. But there’s no way that would create holes in the fuselage or the tail. That has never happened before,” Lanetskyi says.
Their suspicions were finally confirmed on Thursday, when sources in the Azerbaijani government told Euronews that the plane was struck by a Russian ground-to-air missile, and reaffirmed on Friday, when Azerbaijan Airlines said in a statement cited by Reuters that the plane had experienced “external physical and technical interference”.
Azerbaijan’s Transport Minister Rashad Nabiyev said on Friday that surviving passengers had heard an explosion while flying over Grozny, while a flight attendant even sustained an arm injury when “something struck the plane” from outside, but added that the investigation into the crash continued.