Wreckage of lost plane found, search ongoing for missing crew


Rescuers have found the wreckage of a cargo plane in a deep-sea search operation, 12 hours after it went missing off the coast of Karachi, with efforts underway to find the five crew members who were on board, authorities said.

The wreckage of the K2 Airways Boeing 737 was recovered 98km south of Ormara port, the Pakistan Airports Authority said on Wednesday.

The Pakistan Navy and Pakistan Maritime Security Agency deployed “various air and sea borne assets” to locate the remains, it said, adding that the search operation was continuing to find the crew members.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had directed authorities to speed up the search for the 27-year-old converted freighter, which went missing in the Arabian Sea after reporting a navigational system problem.

K2 Airways, the plane’s operator, said the crew comprised two pilots, two engineers and one support staffer. Authorities have made no official declaration on their status, although Sharif expressed his “heartfelt condolences” to their families.

The plane may have crashed into the sea southwest of Karachi after a series of sharp altitude changes before a steep final descent, according to flight-tracking service Flightradar24.

The plane reported a navigational system issue at 9.18pm local time on Tuesday while flying towards Karachi from Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates, the airports authority said.

Local air traffic control tried to guide it, but three minutes later radar systems showed the plane descending rapidly and communication was lost, the authority said. The flight was about 287km west of Karachi at the time, according to the statement.

The final minutes of Flightradar24’s tracking data appeared chaotic, showing the plane plunging about 1.5km (5,000 feet) in less than a minute before soaring about 6,000 feet in 30 seconds and then entering a catastrophic dive from 36,550 feet.

The last transmitted data point placed the aircraft at 1,100 feet above sea level, with a vertical rate of minus 22,400 feet per ­minute – about 400 kph – an extremely steep and abnormal rate of descent.

The missing aircraft is one of Boeing’s decades-old 737-400s, two generations older than the 737 MAX that has been involved in a safety crisis. — Reuters

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Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Thursday (July 9, 2026)

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