Vilnius (AFP) – A DHL cargo plane crashed Monday near the Lithuanian capital’s airport, killing one crew member, with Germany raising the possibility of outside involvement in the disaster. While authorities stopped short of linking the tragedy to a recent series of sabotage cases, Lithuanian officials have in past weeks probed alleged acts of incendiary devices being planted on cargo planes.
The plane, which was coming from the German city of Leipzig, crashed about one kilometre (0.6 miles) from Vilnius airport after hitting several buildings as it skidded several hundred metres, according to the police and the DHL logistics company. Images from the crash site showed debris from the plane and packages on fire scattered across a residential area cordoned off by the emergency services. “So far, there are no signs or evidence suggesting this was sabotage or a terrorist act,” Lithuania’s Defence Minister Laurynas Kasciunas told reporters, adding that the probe to establish the cause could take “about a week”.
State Security Department chief Darius Jauniskis stated that while the Baltic country had seen “an increasingly aggressive Russia,” he could not “rule out the case of terrorism… we cannot make any attributions or point fingers yet.” Echoing that caution, Lithuania’s Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte urged people in a social media post to “refrain from jumping to conclusions” during the investigation. However, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock remarked that “we must now seriously ask ourselves whether this was an accident or whether it was another hybrid incident.” The term “hybrid” is commonly used to describe attacks that do not use conventional military tactics, such as sabotaging infrastructure or launching cyberattacks.
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, European countries have often used the term to describe actions against them that they believe originate from Moscow. Germany’s Defence Minister Boris Pistorius stated later in Berlin that there were “no findings” as yet that indicated there had been an explosive charge on the aircraft that could have caused the crash. According to police, the plane skidded several hundred metres, hitting a residential building which caught fire, along with smaller buildings and a car. Firefighters reported that one of the four crew members died in the crash, with police indicating that the deceased individual was Spanish, while the other three crew members were of Spanish, German, and Lithuanian nationality. One individual was critically injured.
The emergency services noted that the house hit by the plane was evacuated, and its 12 residents were moved to safety. “We were woken by an explosion. Through the window, we saw the wave of explosions and a cloud of fire. Like fireworks,” Stanislovas Jakimavicius, who lives near the crash site, told AFP.
German logistics company DHL clarified that the aircraft was operated by its partner SwiftAir and had been attempting an “emergency landing” early in the morning. A German transport ministry official stated that the country’s Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation “will support the investigation on site.” It was not immediately clear what caused the crash.
Earlier this month, Lithuania conducted arrests as part of a criminal investigation into the sending of incendiary devices on Western-bound planes. According to Polish and Lithuanian media, the devices, including electric massagers implanted with a flammable substance, were sent from Lithuania to Britain in July and could be linked to a lorry fire outside Warsaw. UK anti-terrorism police last month announced that they were investigating how a parcel burst into flames at a depot earlier this year, after a similar incident in Germany that was attributed to Russia.
The Lithuanian president’s chief security adviser has implicated Moscow in these incidents. “We know who the source of these operations is. It is Russian military intelligence,” Kestutis Budrys told Ziniu radio earlier this month. “We cannot let this go unanswered as it will only escalate into new kinds of actions,” Budrys added. Poland and Lithuania, both NATO members bordering Russia, are staunch allies of Ukraine, frequently warning about Russian-inspired sabotage on EU soil.
© 2024 AFP