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Russia tried stretching the service life of its aging An-24 planes past 50 years. One just crashed with dozens on board.

A general view of the site after a Russian passenger plane that disappeared from radar during a flight in the Far East Amur region.
All 49 people on board the aging Antonov An-24 are believed dead.

  • A Russian plane carrying nearly 50 passengers crashed on Thursday in the Amur region.
  • The 49-year-old plane was an An-24, which had its service life extended to 60 years by Russia.
  • The same crashed plane recently had four aviation incidents, including when it rolled off a runway.

A Russian passenger plane that crashed on Thursday was nearly 50 years old and had its service life extended to 2036, according to state media.

The Antonov An-24, a twin-propeller aircraft that seats 43 passengers, disappeared at around 1 pm local time in Russia’s Amur region, regional transport officials said in a Telegram statement.

Russian federal air officials said 42 passengers and seven crew members were on board when the plane crashed on approach to an airport at Tynda, a city in Amur.

Regional officials said the plane had failed to touch down once at Tynda and crashed during its second approach.

Flying conditions were suitable for passenger aircraft, and no distress calls had been issued at the time of the crash, state media outlet TASS reported.

It later wrote that a rescue helicopter observing the crash site found no signs of survivors. As of press time, however, the latest update from Russia’s emergency ministry said ground rescuers hadn’t reached the site due to “difficult mountainous terrain.”

The plane, operated by Siberian-headquartered Angara Airlines, was manufactured in 1976, making it 49 years old, according to state media outlet TASS.

TASS reported that in 2021, this particular An-24’s airworthiness certificate was extended to 2036, which would have allowed it to fly passenger journeys up to 60 years after its maiden flight.

An open-source Russian plane registry listed the crashed An-24 as entering operations in February of 1976, making it 49 years and five months old.

To compare, major international and US airlines typically phase out aircraft that have been in service for over 35 years.

In January, Angara was also one of two Russian airlines that highlighted a need to extend the service life of its An-24s, saying that Western sanctions had limited access to maintenance workers and spare parts for much of its fleet.

“We are today working in a market in which there are no alternatives to the An-24 and An-26,” Angara deputy CEO Sergei Zorin said at the time, per Reuters.

Aviation authorities signed a contract in March to push the aircraft’s service life to 60 years.

State media also reported on Thursday that the crashed An-24 had sustained damage and equipment failures at least three times in the past seven years.

Citing Russia’s federal air transport agency, TASS reported that the plane had rolled off a runway in 2018 and clipped a lightning pole with its left wing. The aircraft also returned to an airport in 2019 after its generator failed, while one of its radio sets was reported to have malfunctioned on the tarmac in May 2025.

Its approach warning system was also activated once in 2022, per TASS.

Still, the state media outlet reported preliminary findings from emergency services that crew error caused the crash, though it did not specify how authorities arrived at that conclusion.

Svetlana Petrenko, a spokeswoman for Russia’s Investigative Committee, said on Thursday that her office would launch a criminal investigation into the crash.

Angara Airlines did not respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.

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Thailand-Cambodia border clashes live: Bangkok accuses Phnom Penh of targeting civilian areas as death toll rises to 16

Cambodia landmine authority alleges Thailand has used cluster bombs as fighting along contested border has moved into second day

Thailand’s acting prime minister warned that cross-border clashes with Cambodia “could develop into war” amid the second day of trading strikes.

Phumtham Wechayachai, cited by AFP, told reporters in Bangkok:

If the situation escalates it could develop into war, though for now it remains limited to clashes.

The UN security council will hold an emergency meeting on Friday over the Cambodia-Thailand border clashes, diplomatic sources told AFP. The meeting, requested by Cambodian prime minister Hun Manet, would be held behind closed doors at 3pm (1900 GMT), the sources said.

Britain’s foreign ministry advised against all but essential travel to parts of Cambodia and Thailand, both popular destinations for foreign tourists, after the fighting.

Fighting was focused on six locations, the Thai army said on Thursday. Six Thai air force jets were deployed, hitting two “Cambodian military targets on the ground”, according to Thai military deputy spokesperson Ritcha Suksuwanon.

Cambodia has not yet commented on casualties on its side. Defence ministry spokeswoman Maly Socheata refused to answer when asked about the issue at a news conference.

Both sides blame the other for starting the fighting. On Wednesday, Thailand had expelled the Cambodian ambassador and recalled its own envoy after five members of a Thai military patrol were wounded by a landmine.

Cambodia downgraded ties to “the lowest level” on Thursday, pulling out all but one of its diplomats and expelling their Thai equivalents from Phnom Penh.

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Australia and UK sign 50-year defence treaty despite US wavering on Aukus submarine deal

While details of the treaty are yet to be announced, it’s expected to cover cooperation in shipbuilding and other areas

Australia and the UK will sign a 50-year treaty to cement the Aukus submarine pact, even as the major partner in the Aukus agreement, the US, wavers on the deal.

The new treaty will be announced by foreign minister Penny Wong and defence minister Richard Marles — alongside British foreign and defence secretaries David Lammy and John Healey — in the wake of the annual Aukmin talks in Sydney today.

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Congressman Robert Garcia believes Ghislaine Maxwell met with Trump DOJ seeking pardon

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The real winners from Trump’s ‘AI action plan’? Tech companies

Millions spent by Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft and others appear to have paid off as president vows to cut red tape

Donald Trump’s AI summit in Washington this week was a fanfare-filled event catered to the tech elite. The president took the stage on Wednesday evening, as the song God Bless the USA piped over the loudspeakers, and then he decreed: “America must once again be a country where innovators are rewarded with a green light, not strangled with red tape, so they can’t move, so they can’t breathe.”

The message was clear – the tech regulatory environment that was once the focus of federal lawmakers is no longer.

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Volunteers map 10,000 routes in Great Britain to help make walking accessible

Campaign group Slow Ways launches app for disabled people, parents with children, older people and others

Volunteers have mapped 10,000 walking routes across Great Britain in an attempt to make rural walking more accessible.

The routes provide accessible and scenic walks for disabled people, parents with children, and older people, according to Slow Ways, the campaign group behind the project.

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