“The plane plunged into the mountain,” Li Chenbin, a technician in the area of the crash told the China News Service. “The whole plane had disintegrated, it was in fragments scattered all around. I didn’t see anyone who lived through it.”
China’s record of safe air travel in the past two decades has become a point of pride for officials, and comfort for travelers.
Now the Chinese government, China Eastern Airlines, as well as Boeing will be under pressure to help explain how a plane could speed earthward with such destructive force. Many people on Chinese social media sites have noted that China had gone 4,226 days without a major aviation accident, an enviable record after a string of disasters in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Boeing said in an emailed statement that “our technical experts are prepared to assist with the investigation led by the Civil Aviation Administration of China.”
By late Monday search teams had poured into the area, assembling tents and command posts, setting up power supplies and lights, and lining up dozens of ambulances in the hope of finding anyone alive. Dozens of local volunteers on motorbikes also carried in water, food and tents.
But search efforts on Monday night were hampered by a lack of electricity and the remote location. Rain was forecast for Tuesday, which could make search efforts more difficult.