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Turkey claims electrical failure was reported before Libyan military plane crash

Turkey's director of communications said that the private jet carrying Libya's chief of staff requested an emergency landing before it crashed near Ankara.

Burhanettin Duran said that the Dassault Falcon 50 jet left Ankara’s Esenboga Airport on Tuesday at 1717 GMT en route for Tripoli. At 1733 GMT, it notified air traffic control about an?emergency due to an electrical malfunction'.

According to Libyan and Turkish officials, eight people, including three members of the crew, died in the crash.

The aircraft was redirected back to Esenboga Airport and emergency measures were taken. However, the jet vanished?from radar? at 1736 GMT while it was descending for landing, he stated.

Ali Yerlikaya, Turkish Interior Minister, said earlier that the aircraft requested a landing emergency while flying over Ankara’s Haymana District. He added that the wreckage later was found near Kesikkavak Village in the area.

Duran stated that search and rescue teams had reached the crash scene after operations launched by the Turkish Interior Ministry. Investigations into the cause of the crash were ongoing with all relevant authorities.

The internationally recognized?government of Libya has confirmed that the dead include the country's 'army chief of Staff, Mohammed Ali Ahmed Al-Haddad', as well as four members of the 'entourage'.

Libyan officials said that the jet had been leased and registered on Malta. They added that the ownership and technical history of the aircraft would be investigated as part the investigation. (Reporting and editing by Thomas Derpinghaus; Ece Toksabay)

(source: Reuters)