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WAR REPORT
Top Islamist among dead as Libya plane crashes in Tunisia
by Staff Writers
Nianou, Tunisia (AFP) Feb 21, 2014


Black boxes found from Libyan plane crash in Tunisia
Tunis (AFP) Feb 22, 2014 - Tunisian searchers have found and handed over to Tripoli the black boxes from a Libyan military plane that crashed Friday, killing 11 including a top former jihadist, the government said.

"The transport ministry announces that the two black boxes from the Libyan military aircraft that crashed yesterday in the Grombalia region have been found," a statement on Saturday said.

The ministry said in a second statement Tunisian authorities had handed over the black boxes to Tripoli to help them investigate why the military hospital plane had crashed.

The aircraft came down at about 1:30 am (0030 GMT) on Friday in a field on the edge of Nianou village, around 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the capital Tunis.

It had been transporting Meftah al-Mabrouk Issa al-Dhawadi to Tunis from a military airfield near Tripoli for medical treatment, the Libyan government said in a statement.

Sofiene Bejaoui, an air traffic control official at Tunis-Carthage airport, where the plane had been heading, said on Friday "the pilot's last message was: 'engine on fire'".

All 11 on board were killed. In addition to Dhawadi and another unidentified patient, the dead were three medics and a crew of six.

The transport ministry also said on Saturday that the bodies of those killed in the crash would be handed back to Tripoli after DNA identification was completed, set to take place on Sunday.

Dhawadi was a leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) -- a now disbanded movement with alleged links to Al-Qaeda which joined the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that overthrew dictator Moamer Kadhafi.

Several members of the group served in the transitional government of Abdelrahim al-Kib, which held power for a year from November 2011.

Dhawadi was undersecretary at the ministry of martyrs and missing persons.

The aircraft that crashed was a Libyan air force Russian-made Antonov-26, a twin-engine turboprob.

A medical plane carrying a former jihadist turned member of Libya's first transitional government crashed south of Tunis early Friday, killing all 11 on board, Tunisian and Libyan officials said.

The aircraft came down in a field on the edge of Nianou village, around 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the capital, without hitting any houses, and burst into flames, an AFP journalist reported.

The Libyan flag was still visible on the tailplane amid the charred wreckage, which belonged to the Libyan air force.

"The plane crashed at 1:30 am (0030 GMT)... with 11 people on board -- three doctors, two patients and six crew members," emergency services spokesman Mongi El Kadhi said.

"The whole plane was completely burnt out. The emergency services went to the crash site and recovered the charred bodies."

The plane was transporting Meftah al-Mabrouk Issa al-Dhawadi to Tunis from a military airfield near Tripoli for medical treatment, the Libyan government said in a statement.

Another unidentified patient was on the plane, according to the statement, adding that they were accompanied by four people, including a doctor, and five crew.

Dhawadi was a leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) -- a now disbanded movement with alleged links to Al-Qaeda which joined the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that overthrew dictator Moamer Kadhafi.

Several members of the group served in the transitional government of Abdelrahim al-Kib, which held power for a year from November 2011. Dhawadi was undersecretary at the ministry of martyrs and missing persons.

Libya's deputy defence minister Khaled al-Cherif, himself a former LIFG member, confirmed on Facebook that the group's former leader had died in the plane crash.

- 'Engine on fire' message -

Tunis air traffic control official Sofiene Bejaoui said the aircraft was a Soviet-designed twin-engine turboprop.

"According to the air traffic controller who spoke to him last, the pilot's final message was 'Engine on fire'," he said.

"The plane is a Libyan air force Antonov-26, registration number Five Alpha Delta Oscar Whiskey," Bejaoui said.

Mohammed ben Mohammed Elechi told AFP he was still awake when the aircraft hit the ground.

"I was awake at 1:20 am and I was the first to see the plane crash here. The front of the plane crashed first, then it burst into a big fire."

Firemen battled during the night to extinguish the flames that engulfed the wreckage.

Nearly 1,400 of the military transport aircraft were built between 1969 and 1986, 420 of them for export, according to the manufacturer's website.

At daybreak, teams began searching for the aircraft's black box flight recorders in a bid to confirm that engine failure was behind the accident and to establish why it malfunctioned.

Sheikh Dhawadi -- nom de guerre Abu Abdel-Ghafar -- was among the founding members of the Libyan jihadist group that launched an armed campaign against Kadhafi's regime in 1995, and which Al-Qaeda announced had joined its network in 2007.

The group was formed clandestinely in Afghanistan in the early 1990s, where its members battled Soviet troops alongside other Arab mujahedeen.

In 1992, Dhawadi was captured by the Egyptian authorities and returned to Libya where he spent 18 years in prison.

He was finally freed in February 2011, on the eve of the uprising against the Libyan strongman.

The ex-jihadist was actively involved in the armed rebellion and was eventually named head of the military council of Sabratha, his home town 70 kilometres (40 miles) west of Tripoli.

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