A
plane has crashed in Goma, the main city in eastern Democratic Republic
of Congo, killing at least five passengers, officials say.
It came down in the city centre shortly before it was due to
land in bad weather at Goma airport.
A government spokesman said no-one appeared to have died on
the ground as the plane fell in an empty area. Earlier reports suggested
as many as 30 people had died.
DR Congo has a poor air safety record.
Its airlines have been banned by the European Union from
flying into EU airspace.
Two years ago, 74 people were killed in a crash at the
airport in the central city of Kisangani.
Last year, President Joseph Kabila's personal adviser,
Augustin Katumba, was killed in a crash in the city of Bukavu.
'Field of disasters'
In the latest accident, the aircraft, a Fokker 50 owned by
local company CAA, was flying in from the central mining town of Lodja
when it came down in heavy rainfall, AFP reports.
It was not immediately clear how many people were on board,
and darkness hampered the rescue operation, but local residents said
there were survivors.
The plane crashed in the centre of Goma, near the electoral
commission's building, but it did not hit any people on the ground, the
city's mayor Naasson Kubuya told the Associated Press news agency.
"The pilot managed to avoid houses. It's a horrifying
accident,'' Mr Kubuya was quoted as saying.
"The city of Goma has become a field of disasters. We
sympathise with the families of the deceased.''