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48 killed in Russian passenger plane crash, official says

1:26
Dozens killed in Russian passenger plane crash, official says
Handout/Investigative Committee of Russia
ByGuy Davies, Tanya Stukalova, and David Brennan
July 24, 2025, 12:43 PM

LONDON and MOSCOW -- A passenger plane carrying 48 people crashed on Thursday morning in Russia's far eastern Amur region with no survivors, according to the local governor.

The Russian news agency Interfax reported that the plane's wreckage was found around nine miles from its intended destination in the town of Tynda, having traveled from the regional hub of Blagoveshchensk some 360 miles away.

Gov. Vasily Orlov said in a post to Telegram that the An-24 aircraft vanished from radar close to Tynda. Emergency services later found the wreckage in nearby woods. "I regret to inform you that there are no survivors," Orlov wrote in a later post. "Rescuers have reached the crash site." Orlov declared three days of mourning.

PHOTO: This grab from a handout footage released by the Eastern Interregional Directorate for Transport of the Russian Investigative Committee on July 24, 2025, shows the crash site of the Antonov An-24 passenger plane outside the town of Tynda, Russia.
This video grab from a handout footage released by the Eastern Interregional Directorate for Transport of the Russian Investigative Committee on July 24, 2025, shows an aerial view of the crash site of the Antonov An-24 passenger plane outside the town of Tynda in Russia's far eastern Amur region.
Handout/Investigative Committee of Russia

Artem Korenyako -- a spokesperson for Russia's federal aviation agency Rosaviatsiya -- wrote on Telegram that a search and rescue helicopter "discovered a burning fuselage."

Russia's Ministry of Emergency Situations also reported the discovery of burning wreckage in a post to Telegram. More than 50 people and 10 pieces of equipment were deployed in search and rescue efforts, the ministry said.

Irkutsk Oblast Gov. Igor Kobzev said that "the flight crew, technical staff and flight attendants lived in the Irkutsk region." He noted that officials are working to "get a full list of passengers today and, of course, to see who of them lives in the Irkutsk region."

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

ABC News' Morgan Winsor contributed to this report.

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