Sao Paulo: A VoePass aircraft with 57 passengers and four crew members on board crashed in Brazil, killing everyone on board and leaving flaming wreckage in a residential neighbourhood.
The airline, which operates a small fleet of planes made by ATR, said the flight was traveling from the state of Parana to Sao Paulo's Guarulhos International Airport. It crashed in Vinhedo, a city in the interior of the state of Sao Paulo. Governor Tarcisio de Freitas confirmed in a news conference that no one had survived.
VoePass, which initially said that 62 passengers and crew had been on the aircraft, said in a later statement Friday that all 61 people on board died at the scene.
The aircraft, a French-made ATR 72-500 operated by the airline Voepass, was traveling from Cascavel in southern Parana state to Sao Paulo's Guarulhos international airport when it crashed in the city of Vinhedo.
Images broadcast on local media showed a large plane nosediving at high speed, while others showed a large column of smoke rising from the crash site in what appeared to be a residential area.
"There were no survivors," the city government in Valinhos - which was involved in the rescue and recovery operation in nearby Vinhedo - said in an email sent to AFP.
The city of Vinhedo, with about 76,000 residents, is located approximately 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of Sao Paulo.
The city of Vinhedo, with about 76,000 residents, is located approximately 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of Sao Paulo.
Before an official death toll was given, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said during an event that it appeared there were no survivors.
"A plane just crashed in the city of Vinhedo in Sao Paulo, with 57 passengers and four crew members and it seems that everyone died," Lula said in the middle of a speech in Itajai in Santa Catarina state.
In a statement, Voepass reported "an accident involving flight 2283."
"There is still no confirmation of how the accident occurred," it said.
Sao Paulo's fire department wrote on social network X: "Aircraft crash, 7 teams involved, so far only this information."
Terrifying'
Nathalie Cicari, who lives near the crash site, told CNN Brasil the impact was "terrifying."
"I was having lunch, I heard a very loud noise very close by," she said, describing the sound as drone-like but "much louder."
"I went out on the balcony and saw the plane spinning. Within seconds, I realized that it was not a normal movement for a plane," she told the broadcaster.
Cicari was not hurt but had to evacuate her house, which was filled with black smoke from the crash.
Teams of firefighters, military police and state civil defense were deployed in the Capela neighborhood, in Vinhedo.
The doomed plane recorded its first flight in April 2010, according to the website planespotters.net.
VoePass, based in Sao Paulo state, is one of Brazil's oldest operating airlines. VoePass has a fleet of 16 ATR models, including two of the smaller -42 variant. The planes have an average age of about 17 years, according to tracking website Planespotters. The aircraft involved in the crash was 14 years old, according to FlightRadar24.
The airline, formerly known as Passaredo, announced an expansion of its codeshare agreement with Latam Airlines Group SA in 2023. Latam said VoePass was the operator of the flight that crashed.