A plane crashed in Kenya’s coastal region of Kwale early Tuesday while en route to Maasai Mara National Reserve, with 12 people feared dead, officials said.
The crash happened in a hilly and forested area about 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Diani airstrip, authorities said. Kwale County Commissioner Stephen Orinde told The Associated Press that the passengers were “all foreign tourists” and their nationalities would be confirmed later.
The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority said that 12 people were onboard the Cessna Caravan-type aircraft, and authorities were investigating the cause of the crash. The breakdown of how many were passengers and crew wasn’t immediately clear
The aircraft crashed minutes after takeoff and burst into flames, leaving a charred wreckage at the scene, officials said.
Witnesses told the AP that they heard a loud bang, and on arriving at the scene they found unrecognizable human remains.
The airline, Mombasa Air Safari, told the AP that it was collaborating with the civil aviation body and updates on the crash would be shared though the authority.
Maasai Mara National Reserve is a popular tourist destination and features the annual wildebeest migration from the Serengeti in Tanzania.
A report from the Aviation Safety Network stated: “A Mombasa Air Safari Cessna 208B Grand Caravan, flight RRV203, crashed near Kwale.
“The twelve occupants perished, and the aircraft was destroyed.”
The airline operates flights connecting Mombasa with major tourist destinations across the country.
In August, a light aircraft belonging to the medical NGO Amref crashed on the outskirts of capital Nairobi, killing six and injuring two more.
It comes after another small plane crashed into a row of trucks in Texas, killing two people.