At least two people have been killed and another 11 wounded after a plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Myanmar, officials say.
The Air Bagan plane was carrying more than 60 passengers. Two Britons are believed to be among the injured.
It was on its way from the city of Rangoon to Heho airport in Shan state when it crash-landed about 3km (two miles) from the runway.
Reports say a fire in one of the engines may have caused the accident.
Myanmar government officials have confirmed a passenger was found dead inside the plane.
A motorcyclist near Heho airport was also killed when the Fokker jet made its emergency landing in thick fog in a rice field.
The UK Foreign Office said it was working with Myanmarese authorities to establish whether two of the foreigners wounded in the crash were British.
“Our acting consul is en route to Heho Airport and the charge d’affaires has been deployed to Rangoon airport as we understand that some passengers involved in the incident are being flown there,” a UK Foreign Office spokesman said.
Two pilots were also among the injured, who are reported to have been taken to Sao San Tun Hospital in Shan’s capital, Taunggyi.
“The cause of the accident is not clear yet. Only the pilots will know the cause, but we can’t contact them yet as they have been sent to hospital,” Air Bagan spokesman Ye Min Oo said in a statement.
Sources told AFP news agency a fire had started in one of the engines. The plane broke in half when it crashed, eyewitnesses said.
Heho is the gateway to the popular tourist destination of Inle Lake in Shan state.
Air Bagan is one of handful of privately owned carriers flying domestic routes in Burma. The airline operated two Fokker-100 jets, which are no longer being manufactured.
Diplomats have routinely expressed concern about the safety of Burma’s domestic airlines, which have been unable to modernise their fleets because of sanctions, and whose safety checks are not published, the BBC’s south-east Asia correspondent Jonathan Head reports.
The rapidly increasing number of foreigners visiting Burma is putting a strain on those airlines, which offer the only way of getting around such a large country with very poor roads and railways, he says.
Source: The Daily Star