6 hours ago
Harry Sekulich
Russian authorities say a technical malfunction caused the An-26 to crash into a cliff.

6 hours ago
Harry Sekulich

AirTeamImages
A Russian military plane has crashed in Crimea, killing 29 people on board, Russia's Defence Ministry has told state media.
Wreckage of the An-26 aircraft was found after the plane lost contact with authorities during a "routine flight", the ministry told Russian news agencies Tass and Ria-Novosti.
Technical issues appear to have caused the plane to crash into a cliff, with six crew members and 23 passengers on board, the ministry was quoted as saying. There does not seem to have been any survivors.
Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. The ministry reported no external damage to the aircraft, implying that missiles, drones or birds are not suspected of causing the crash.
Tass reported that communication with the plane was lost at about 18:00 local time (15:00 GMT) on Tuesday, and the wreckage was found following a search and rescue effort.
The An-26 is a Soviet-era aircraft mainly used in a military capacity to transport heavy cargo and smaller numbers of passengers over a short-to-medium distance. It is manufactured by the Ukrainian aerospace company Antonov.
The planes have been used since the late 1960s, but have been involved in several deadly crashes.
Fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces has been ongoing in Crimea since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion four years ago.
Ukrainian strikes have largely targeted Russian military bases in the peninsula, which borders the partly Russian-occupied Kherson region in southern Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly demanded Russia withdraw from Crimea as part of a ceasefire. In November, a US-backed peace plan proposed Kyiv would cede control of Crimea.
Rustem Umerov, Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, discussed the progress of the negotiation process and the issue of the return of Ukrainians from Russian captivity with Turkish ministers and an advisor to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Over the past 24 hours, 12 settlements in the Kharkiv region came under Russian attack, leaving six people injured, including a child.

Yevhenii Solovei, a cameraman for the Ukrainian news programme TSN who had been covering the war alongside war correspondents since 2014 and volunteered to serve as a drone pilot in 2022, has been killed at the front.

Serhiy Kolyada’s ironic take on the latest international events.