After a preliminary probe into the crashlanding of Nepal's Yeti Airlines on January 15, results showed it occurred due to the failure of the propellers of both engines at the time of landing.
The search for the lone missing person in the Nepal plane crash intensified on Friday, Nepal Army officials said, as the postmortem of the remaining victims continued here at Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital.
The ill-fated ATR-72 plane from Yeti Airlines took off from Kathmandu for Pokhara at 10.30 on Sunday morning and lost contact with the air traffic control at 10.50 am.
Ashok Tripathi (54) and Vaibhavi Tripathi (51) had separated following court orders. The court had directed that the family was to be together for 10 days a year and this year, Ashok and Vaibhavi had planned a trip to Nepal with their son Dhanush (22) and daughter Ritika (15).
The Canadian-built turboprop Twin Otter 9N-AET plane went missing on Sunday morning in the mountainous region of Nepal minutes after taking off from the tourist city of Pokhara.