http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2005-08-14T112430Z_01_KWA433859_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-CRASH-GREECE-DC.XMLBy Brian Williams
ATHENS (Reuters) - A Cypriot airliner carrying 121 people crashed north of Athens on Sunday after the pilot and a passenger reported cabin pressure problems moments before the plane was due to land.
"The pilot has turned blue," a passenger said in a mobile text message to his cousin, Greek television reported. "Cousin farewell, we're freezing," it said.
Greek TV station Alpha reported that the pilot had told air traffic controllers the plane was experiencing air conditioning problems. Moments later, communications with the plane were cut.
Greek police and firefighters at the crash site said there were no immediate signs of survivors. Plane wreckage was scattered widely about the mountainous, uninhabited area, about 40 km (25 miles) north of Athens.
"We have yet to locate any survivors. There is a small fire still burning, but it will be dealt with very quickly," a firefighter at the scene told Reuters.
Two Greek F-16 fighter jets were scrambled after the Helios Airways jet, en route from Larnaca in Cyprus to Prague via Athens, lost contact with the control tower at Athens international airport.
One of the F-16 pilots reported that he could not see the captain in the cockpit and his co-pilot appeared to be slumped in his seat, a Defense Ministry official told Reuters.
Greek police said there were no signs the plane had been hijacked.
LOST CONSCIOUSNESS
Cypriot airport officials said flight HCY522 left Larnaca at 9 a.m. and lost contact at 10:30 a.m. The pilot appeared to have lost consciousness due to a loss in cabin pressure in the cockpit, Larnaca airport officials said on Cyprus state television CYBC.
"I saw the plane coming. I knew it was serious or that it was some kind of VIP because I saw the two fighter jets," said witness Dimitris Karezas, who owns a summer camp in the area.? ?
"Two, three minutes later I heard a big bang," he said.
A Greek police spokesman said there had been 115 passengers and six crew members on board, of which 59 and eight children were heading to Athens, with 48 continuing on to Prague.
A spokeswoman for the Czech Airport Authority, Anna Kovarikova, said the flight had been due to land in Prague at 1. 10 a.m. (1110 GMT).
As the extent of the disaster became clear, Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis broke off his holiday on the Greek island of Tinos to rush back to Athens.
Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos was heading to Larnaca, where frantic relatives and friends began gathering outside the offices of Helios.
At the airport in Prague, where friends and relatives were gathering to meet the flight, screens showing departures and arrivals read simply "delayed."
Helios, Cyprus's first private carrier, established in 1999, flies to Dublin, Sofia, Warsaw, Prague, Strasbourg and several British airports using a fleet of Boeing B737 aircraft.
(Additional reporting by Karolos Grohmann in Athens, Jean Christou in Nicosia and Alan Crosby in Prague)
R.I.P to all the persons aboard...