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Pakistan recovers more cargo plane debris from Arabian Sea as search for missing crew enters 3rd day

Authorities say Pakistan Navy search teams have recovered additional debris from a cargo plane that crashed into the Arabian Sea earlier this week. The recovered wreckage will be analyzed by investigators as the search for the aircraft’s five missing crew members enters its third day Friday. The Pak

Published July 10, 2026, 9:23 AM
Updated July 10, 2026, 9:45 AM5.0K
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Pakistan recovers more cargo plane debris from Arabian Sea as search for missing crew enters 3rd day

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan Navy search teams recovered additional debris from a cargo plane that crashed into the Arabian Sea earlier this week, with the recovered wreckage to be analyzed by investigators as the search for the aircraft’s five missing crew members entered its third day Friday.

The Pakistan Airports Authority said in a post on X that search-and-rescue operations by the Pakistan Navy and the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency remained underway in deep waters, with aircraft and other assets deployed in a coordinated effort to locate the missing crew.

The authority did not provide additional details, saying further updates would be shared later. The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

The cargo plane, operated by Karachi-based private carrier K2 Airways, disappeared from radar late Tuesday while flying from Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates to Karachi, Pakistan, after reporting a malfunction in its navigation system.

The Navy recovered the first pieces of wreckage Wednesday about 100 kilometers (60 miles) off the coastal town of Ormara on Pakistan’s southwestern Makran coast in Balochistan province, but officials have said the aircraft’s main fuselage and all five crew members remain missing.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has directed authorities to use all available resources to locate the missing crew members, while K2 Airways said it is extending full cooperation to civil aviation authorities investigating the crash.

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The search has been complicated by rough seas, strong winds and shifting ocean currents, which can scatter floating debris over a wide area and make it more difficult to pinpoint the crash site.

The Pakistan Airports Authority has said radar data indicated the aircraft made a sharp change in heading and rapidly descended before radio and radar contact were lost at about 9:21 p.m. Tuesday, about 287 kilometers (178 miles) west of Karachi.

Pakistan has experienced several fatal air crashes in recent decades.

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