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Search finds 49,000 pieces of China Eastern plane that crashed into mountainside

White-suited searchers carrying piece of crashed plane
Searchers carry a piece of wreckage from a China Eastern flight that crashed into a mountainside in southern China’s Guangxi province.
(Zhou Hua / Xinhua )
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Chinese officials said Thursday that the search for wreckage in last week’s crash of a China Eastern Boeing 737-800 is basically done and that more than 49,000 pieces of debris had been found.

China Eastern Flight 5735 plunged from 29,000 feet into a mountainside in southern China’s Guangxi province, killing all 132 people on board. The impact created a 65-foot-deep crater, set off a fire in the surrounding forest and smashed the plane into small parts scattered over a wide area, some of them buried underground.

Zhu Tao, the director of aviation safety for the Civil Aviation Administration of China, said at a news conference in the nearby city of Wuzhou that important parts including the horizontal stabilizer, engine and remains of the right wing tip had been recovered after nearly 10 days of searching, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

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The investigation into the cause of the crash faces several challenges, including the fact that the plane plummeted without warning, air-traffic controllers got no reply from the pilots after it started falling and the pieces of debris are so small.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam says the city will lift flight bans on nine countries, including Britain and the U.S., starting April 1.

More than 800,000 cubic feet of soil was excavated and 49,117 pieces of the plane recovered, said Zhang Zhiwen, an official with the Guangxi government. The search was made more difficult by rain and muddy conditions in the remote and steep location.

The two “black boxes” — the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder — have been found and sent to Beijing for examination and analysis. Zhu said a preliminary investigation report would be completed within 30 days of the March 21 crash.

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A team of U.S. investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board and advisors from Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration have been granted visas to travel to China to take part in the investigation, under long-standing international agreements.

Engine manufacturer CFM will support the investigation but not send anyone to China, the NTSB said, correcting an earlier announcement that company representatives would be part of the traveling team.

The China Eastern flight, with 123 passengers and nine crew members, was headed from the southwestern city of Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, to Guangzhou, a major city and export manufacturing hub near Hong Kong in southeastern China.

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