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 Benin crash victims arrive home in Beirut
    December 29 2003 at 06:54AM Get IOL on your
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By Mariam Karouny

Beirut - Coffins carrying the remains of 79 people who died in a Christmas Day air crash in Benin arrived in Beirut on Sunday.

The 77 Lebanese and two Iranians were among 140 people killed when the Beirut-bound plane smashed into the sea moments after takeoff from the West African country's main city of Cotonou. Twenty one people survived the crash.

The coffins arrived in Beirut on a cargo plane, accompanied by 30 family members and Lebanese divers who had helped retrieve the bodies.

The 77 Lebanese and two Iranians were among 140 people killed
Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, House Speaker Nabih Berri and Muslim clerics stood on the airport tarmac as the plane arrived.

A band played sombre music as the Lebanese coffins, each wrapped in the national flag, were transferred into ambulances to take them to homes across Lebanon. The victims are expected to be buried on Monday.
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Lebanese television said the two Iranians would be flown home from Beirut.

The bodies were flown out of Benin after a ceremony attended by hundreds of people including Benin's President Mathieu Kerekou at Cotonou's airport.

Another Lebanese plane flew to Benin on Sunday carrying family members to identify 14 remaining bodies.

Divers have recovered the black boxes from the plane and an investigation has been launched into the crash.

Officials have suggested the Boeing 727 may have been overloaded.

More than 100 of the passengers were Lebanese nationals heading home for end-of-year-holidays.

The victims also included 15 Bangladeshi army officers returning from UN peacekeeping duties in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Others were from Conakry, Guinea, where the flight originated. They were also due to be flown home on Sunday.

Lebanon's Foreign Minister Jean Obeid, who flew to Benin after the crash and returned home on Saturday with 15 survivors, has said the plane appeared to have been overloaded.

Airport officials in Benin said the aircraft had trouble retracting its undercarriage but did not rule out that it may have been overloaded.

French aviation experts were expected in Benin on Sunday to help the investigation.

The plane was first used by the Guinean-registered company Union des Transporteurs Africains (UTA) in September this year.

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