A U.S. registered cargo plane has been impounded at an
airport in Zimbabwe after workers reportedly found a dead body inside.
State-run newspaper The Herald reports the MD-11 trijet is being held at
Harare International Airport after workers spotted blood dripping from the
aircraft during a routine fuel stop. Inside, they found a dead body and
"millions" of South African rand.
The plane, owned by Florida-based
Western Global Airlines, is understood to have been transporting large sums of
cash from Munich in Germany via Belgium and Nigeria and was bound for the
seaside town of Durban in South Africa when it stopped in Harare for refueling.
“The jet crew was questioned and they said they hit a bird
in the air. But then a search was made and the body of an adult male fell out,”
a source told African News Agency.
A spokesman for the South African
Reserve Bank suggested the body belonged to a “stowaway” and expressed the hope
its money would be released soon.
One million South African rand
converts to roughly $63,000 U.S.
Officials can explain the money, as
the plane was reportedly flying from Germany to South Africa carrying new rand
notes to the South African Reserve Bank. It's the dead body officials are still
investigating.
SABC reports South Africa's
ambassador to Zimbabwe is speculating the body might be that of a
stowaway.
"It was reportedly found in the cargo section, which is
almost on the underbelly of the plane," an SABC reporter said.
Local reports said four crew members
had been arrested: two Americans, a Pakistani and a South African. An airport
source told The Telegraph that two couriers had remained on the plane since the
discovery on Sunday, reluctant to leave its valuable cargo.
Images circulated on social media
showed a charred body protruding from a flap on the outside of the aircraft.
Officials with face masks stand to one side on a hydraulic platform and
Zimbabwe Republic Police tape is visible. A Zimbabwean aviation source told The
Telegraph the body fell out of the flap when security staff began searching for
the source of the blood.
Pradeep Maharaj, Group Executive for
the South African Reserve Bank's currency operations, would not confirm whether
SARB employees were on the craft.
“The South African Reserve Bank is aware of an aircraft
carrying a SARB consignment that stopped in Harare and was detained following
the discovery of an unidentified body that is presumed to be a stowaway on the
aircraft,” he said in a statement.
“The SARB is working with the relevant authorities to ensure
that the cargo is released and transported to South Africa.”
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