Tu-154 Russia plane crash: Massive search operation launched
Tu-154 Russia plane crash: Massive search operation launchedReuters

A massive search operation was launched in the Black Sea on Monday to find the bodies of the Russia plane crash victims. Thousands of rescuers searched for the remains of the Syria-bound military plane which was carrying 92 people.

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The plane, a Tu-154 jet, was carrying at least 60 members of the Red Army Choir who were heading towards Syria to entertain the Russian troops in the country for the New Year celebrations. Reports state that the plane went down off the city of Sochi soon after it took off on Sunday. At least 11 bodies have been found and flown into the Russian capital.

Transport Minister Maksim Sokolov during a televised briefing on Monday said authorities do not believe the plane crash was an act of terrorism, however, investigators are yet to confirm the cause of the crash.

"There could be various causes – they are being analysed by specialists, experts, the Investigative Committee. Currently, the main versions do not include an act of terror," Sokolov said. He also added that although the search operations are on, some of the bodies could have been carried off by the current to Abkhazia, the Georgian separatist region.

Reports state that the search operation continued throughout the night where more than 3,000 workers raced to find the rest of the bodies, the black box and the debris of the plane to find out what happened during the final moments in the plane. The massive search operation also included around 39 vessels which were covering more than a 100 square kilometres of the water and planes and helicopters searching for any trace from above.

"I think we will be able to find the location of the plane on the bottom of the Black Sea today," the commander of the Russian air force, Viktor Bondarev, told agencies.

"Eleven bodies and 154 (body) fragments were found over the first day. The search is complicated by the large depth range and the sea bottom relief characteristics in the presumed crash area," defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said in a press briefing.