MEXICO CITY — An Aeromexico jetliner carrying 103 people crashed in stormy weather shortly after takeoff Tuesday in Mexico’s north-central state of Durango, according to Mexican officials. But in what appeared to be a remarkable survival story, authorities said none of the occupants had been killed.
The Mexican airline said on its Twitter account that Flight 2431, an Embraer ERJ-190AR jet, had been scheduled to fly from the General Guadalupe Victoria International Airport in the city of Durango to Mexico City. The 550-mile flight takes about two hours.
The plane, carrying 99 passengers and four crew members, crashed after departing the airport around 4 p.m., Secretary of Communications and Transportation Gerardo Ruiz Esparza said on Twitter. Aeromexico updated the passenger count late Tuesday to include two infants.
At least 80 of the plane’s occupants were treated at hospitals, said Alejandro Cardoza, a spokesman for the state Civil Protection Agency. One person, the plane's captain, was in critical condition Tuesday night and was undergoing surgery for a spinal injury, officials said.
Andrés Conesa, the chief executive of Aeromexico, said at a news conference that the captain’s injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.
Mexican news media reported that the aircraft hit the ground nose-first, a few hundred yards from the end of the runway, and that many of the passengers were able to clamber out of the plane on their own.
Emergency vehicles and firetrucks arrived within five minutes of the crash, said Campuzano.
Photos posted to social media by the Durango branch of the country’s Civil Protection Agency showed thick black smoke rising from the body of the severely damaged plane.
The cause of the crash was not immediately known. OMA, the company that operates the Durango airport said in a Twitter post that preliminary information indicated that the crash was “due to adverse weather conditions.”
Conesa of Aeromexico said an investigation into the cause was underway.
The Brazilian-made Embraer plane was about 10 years old and had been used by two other airlines, according to the aviation website Planespotters. Aeromexico has used the plane for four years, and Conesa said it had been “perfectly maintained” by the airline.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Kirk Semple and Paulina Villegas © 2018 The New York Times