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setUoYouRPROFILE's blog: "tufui"

created on 08/25/2011  |  http://fubar.com/tufui/b343104

Float plane crashes on Yellowknife street, 2 dead View larger image View larger image RCMP officers inspect the wreckage of an Arctic Sunwest plane crash that claimed the lives of two people and injured seven others in Yellowknife on Thursday Sept.,gucci outlet 22, 2011. (James Mackenzie / THE CANADIAN PRESS) RCMP officers inspect the wreckage of an Arctic Sunwest plane crash that claimed the lives of two people and injured seven others in Yellowknife on Thursday Sept., 22, 2011. (James Mackenzie / THE CANADIAN PRESS) View larger image View larger image An RCMP officer inspects the wreckage of an Arctic Sunwest plane crash that claimed the lives of two people and injured seven others in Yellowknife on Thursday Sept., 22, 2011. (James Mackenzie / THE CANADIAN PRESS) An RCMP officer inspects the wreckage of an Arctic Sunwest plane crash that claimed the lives of two people and injured seven others in Yellowknife on Thursday Sept., 22, 2011. (James Mackenzie / THE CANADIAN PRESS) View larger image View larger image Medical personnel aid an injured person after a small float plane has crashed on a street in Yellowknife on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011. Medical personnel aid an injured person after a small float plane has crashed on a street in Yellowknife on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011. Updated: Thu Sep. 22 2011 17:50:19 CTVNews.ca Staff Two people have been killed and several others are in hospital after a float plane crashed on a street in Yellowknife. Nine people were on board the Twin Otter plane, said Chris Krepski, a spokesman with the Transportation Safety Board. Witnesses said the plane's two pilots died in the crash, despite efforts to save their lives. Seven others were transported to hospital. Two were in critical condition while the other five were in stable condition. At least one of the injured was being flown to hospital in Edmonton for treatment. The plane crashed at around 1 p.m. local time between two buildings in an area of Yellowknife known as Old Town. Debbie Doody, co-owner of the Dancing Moose Café, said the nearby crash sounded "kind of like thunder." "I can't really explain it. We all just jumped," she said. "The ladies sitting there in the restaurant, they saw the whole plane go right by the window. They jumped up and screamed and there was this giant crash and the power went out." Witnesses rushed out and wound up performing CPR on the two pilots, Doody said, but they were unable to save them. "It's really upsetting," she said. RCMP closed off roads in the neighbourhood around the downed aircraft, which is owned by Yellowknife-based Arctic Sunwest Charters. The company is not commenting on the crash, and the Transportation Safety Board said two investigators will visit the site. It's unclear whether the plane was taking off or landing on Great Slave Lake when the plane went down, said RCMP Const. Kathy Law. Yellowknife Mayor Gord Van Tighen told APTN the plane may have clipped a power line moments before the crash. Van Tighen said the incident would be felt across the community. "Our librarian lives in a house near there, friends of mine live on the street, I live a block away. So yeah, it was close to home," he said. "Everybody in town will be hit with this, one way or another." With files from The Canadian Press

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