Audio By Carbonatix
Passengers and crew on board a jet that was forced to make an emergency landing at a Moscow airport say it was struck by lightning moments before it crashed.
Reports of the strike came as survivors told how they escaped the Aeroflot jet which burst into flames on landing at Sheremetyevo airport on Sunday.
Forty-one of the 78 people on board were killed in the accident.
Investigators probing the cause of the crash have made no official comment on the claims it was hit by lightning.
Modern aircraft are built to withstand lightning strikes, and Russia's national carrier has said only that the plane returned to the airport for "technical reasons".
However, passengers said the plane, which was heading for the northern Russian city of Murmansk, was struck just after take-off.
Pilot Denis Yevdokimov told Russian media that the lightning had interrupted communication with air traffic controllers and forced him to switch to emergency manual mode.
Dramatic video showed the plane making a very bumpy landing, bursting into flames after bouncing on the tarmac.
Two children and a flight attendant are among the dead. The acting governor of Murmansk, Andrey Chibis, said in a Facebook post that 26 of the victims were from his region.
The plane's so-called black boxes - which record flight data and cockpit conversations - have reportedly been retrieved and handed to investigators.
What have crew and passengers said?
One passenger who survived the crash, Pyotr Yegorov, was quoted as saying that the flight "had just taken off and the aircraft was hit by lightning", adding: "The landing was rough - I almost passed out from fear."
Another survivor, Mikhail Savchenko, said he managed to escape by jumping out onto the emergency exit slides at the front of the Aeroflot jet while the rear was ablaze.
A witness said the plane "jumped like a grasshopper" as it struck the runway at speed.
Passenger Dmitry Khlebushkin told reporters: "I'm alive only thanks to the stewardesses. The girls stood there in the smoke, it was dark, extremely hot, but they pulled people out and helped them get down the chutes".
Stewardess Tatyana Kasatkina said people were leaving their seats and heading for the exits while the plane was still travelling, Russian news site Lenta reports. She said passengers were screaming and phoning relatives as the plane burned.
"It all happened really fast, in a matter of seconds… I was pushing passengers out. I grabbed each one by the collar so that they wouldn't delay the evacuation."
Passengers were evacuated within 55 seconds of the plane coming to a standstill, the airline said.
Footage of passengers running away from the burning plane has also been shared on social media.
Eyewitness Patrick Horlacher told the BBC it was "shocking to see" the plane being ravaged by flames just minutes before he was due to board another flight.
What happened to the plane?
The aircraft, a Sukhoi Superjet-100, left the airport at 18:02 local time (15:02 GMT) on Sunday, bound for Murmansk.
Its crew sent a distress signal when "malfunctions" occurred in bad weather shortly after take-off.
The pilot, Denis Yevdokimov, said there had been some communication with controllers but that it was sporadic.
The aircraft then attempted two emergency landings. On the first approach, the plane was travelling too fast and on the second the automatic systems failed, Russian news agency Interfax said.
The jet hit the tarmac three times and smashed its rear undercarriage, then debris got into an engine and set it ablaze, Interfax reported.
Latest Stories
-
US Supreme Court rejects Trump’s bid to deploy National Guard to Chicago
14 minutes -
Irish grandmother detained in US freed after husband appeals to Congress
23 minutes -
Trump travelled on Epstein’s plane more than previously thought, prosecutor says
32 minutes -
Tunisia cruise past Uganda to start AFCON with win
44 minutes -
Arsenal beat Palace on penalties for place in EFL Cup semis
53 minutes -
Newcastle seek ‘clarification’ over non-penalty
1 hour -
Why Mbappe had £1.3m ethics bonus in PSG contract
1 hour -
American billionaire Martha Stewart joins Snoop and Modric as Swans co-owner
1 hour -
Isak facing two months out after ‘reckless’ tackle – Slot
1 hour -
Real Madrid forward Endrick agrees Lyon loan switch
2 hours -
Some people have left the church because I am a gay woman, says Archbishop
2 hours -
CBS defends pulling 60 Minutes segment about Trump deportations
2 hours -
Man City in advanced talks with Bournemouth’s Semenyo
2 hours -
Jackson claims double as Senegal brush aside Botswana
2 hours -
NPP Electoral Area Coordinators in Ashaiman, Tema East join wave of declarations for Bawumia
2 hours
