
Audio By Carbonatix
At least 13 people have now died after a Russian fighter-bomber plane crashed into an apartment block in the southern Russian town of Yeysk, officials say.
The two pilots of the Su-34 jet, on a training flight, ejected before it hit the building and caused a huge inferno.
Rescuers revised the death toll after finishing their search of the rubble, Russia's emergencies ministry said. Three children were among the victims.
The officials said 68 were rescued from the blaze in the nine-storey block.
Nineteen injured people are being treated following the Monday evening crash.
"According to a report from the pilots, who jettisoned from the plane, the reason for the crash was a fire in one of the engines during take off," the Russian defence ministry said.
"At the point where the Su-34 came down, in the courtyard of a residential block, the plane's fuel supply caught fire," it added.

Footage has emerged apparently showing local residents trying to help one of the pilots, who can be seen lying on the ground with a parachute behind him.
The port town of Yeysk lies near the eastern Ukrainian war zone, across the Sea of Azov from the devastated city of Mariupol.
It has been used as a major training ground for Russia's naval aviation.
Pupils from a nearby secondary school were among more than 360 people evacuated from the crash site, Russian media reported.


A local correspondent in Yeysk told Russia's state-run TV channel Rossiya 24 that two of the apartment blocks caught fire.
The Kremlin has ordered national and regional authorities to provide "all necessary assistance" to victims of the fire.
Russia's Investigative Committee said it had opened a criminal case and sent investigators to the scene.
Latest Stories
-
Today’s front pages: Wednesday, July 8, 2026
16 minutes -
BoG confident cedi stability will continue as dollar pressures ease
1 hour -
Ghana is open for business like never before – 24-Hour Economy takes centre stage in Canada
2 hours -
East Legon, Madina, Adenta, others face 24-hour water interruptions
2 hours -
‘Facts first’ – Samuel Jinapor cautions government over foreign affairs decisions
2 hours -
Foreign policy must be credible or Ghana risks losing influence – Samuel Jinapor
3 hours -
Ghana must base foreign policy on ‘unimpeachable facts’ – Samuel Jinapor
3 hours -
Safo Kantanka’s will does not name a church leader, says Kwame Akufo
3 hours -
Foreign policy must serve Ghanaians, not politics – Samuel Jinapor
4 hours -
‘Take responsibility’ – Minority caucus supports tough action against South Africa
4 hours -
Ebola outbreak in Congo still spreading, WHO says
4 hours -
South African police say death of Nigerian man not linked to anti-migrant violence
4 hours -
Nigeria’s UTM secures gas supply deal, clears key hurdle to $3 billion LNG project
5 hours -
Dangote to fund proposed Kenya refinery with cash, bonds and an IPO
5 hours -
Protests break out in Havana as Cuba struggles to restore electricity
5 hours