A Ukrainian freight plane conveying weapons from Serbia to Bangladesh crashed close to the city of Kavala in northern Greece late on Saturday, Serbian specialists said on Sunday.


Drone pictures from the scene showed garbage from the building and Antonov An-12 airplanes tossed in fields. Greek specialists said there were eight team individuals ready and a Ukrainian unfamiliar service representative said they were all Ukrainian residents.


Serbia's protection service said the plane was conveying 11.5 lots of items made by its safeguard industry and the purchaser was the Bangladesh guard service. He said the group of individuals was killed.


Greek specialists couldn't give data on the airplane's freight however the unique calamity reaction unit and armed force specialists were been dispatched to research the scene.


Serbia's protection serves Nebojsa Stefanovic said the freight included enlightening mortar shells and preparing shells. It had taken off at 1840 GMT from Nis.


"The plane conveyed 11.5 lots of items made by our guard industry. The purchaser was the Bangladesh guard service," Stefanovic said.


He added that the plane's freight was claimed by Serbian organization Valir, an exchange organization enlisted to perform unfamiliar exchange exercises of deadly implement military hardware and other protection items.


State television ERT said that the sign of the airplane was lost not long after the pilot mentioned a crisis arrival from Greek avionics specialists because of a motor issue. Novice video film transferred on Artnews. gr showed the airplane on fire slipping quickly prior to raising a ruckus around town in what had all the earmarks of being a blast.


A senior source at Jordan's respectful flying administrative commission (CARC) denied introductory reports that the plane was made a beeline for Jordan. The source said that its flight schedule remembered a visit to Jordan's Sovereign Alia worldwide air terminal at 9:30 pm (0630 GMT), to refuel, state news office Petra covered Sunday.


The more extensive region in Greece where the airplane crashed has been cordoned off since Saturday night. Occupants close by have been encouraged to keep windows and entryways shut and stay away from the region of the episode.


On Sunday morning, a unit official let correspondents know that firemen "felt their lips consuming" and the white residue was drifting in the air.


"We don't have the foggiest idea what has been influencing us," fire unit facilitator Marios Apostolidis said.