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Two RAF Tornado jets crash in Scotland | Two RAF Tornado jets crash in Scotland |
(39 minutes later) | |
Two people are missing and two others have been picked up by helicopter after two Tornado jets crashed off the north-east coast of Scotland, the Ministry of Defence said. | |
The two rescued from the Moray Firth were taken to hospital in Inverness but no further details were given about their condition. | |
The incident involved two GR4 Tornado aircraft, a type of combat jet that is being used in Afghanistan and that was used extensively during operations over Libya last year. | |
The aircraft flew from RAF Lossiemouth, on the Moray coast, the UK's biggest fast-jet base, which is home to three operational squadrons of Tornado GR4s, as well as the Tornado GR4 Operational Conversion Unit which upgrades the jets. | |
Each plane carries two crew. It is understood the two jets were flying together and were involved in a practice bombing run shortly before the crash. | |
About 15 lifeboat volunteers joined the rescue operation in three boats after reports that the jets came down about 25 miles south of Wick, Highland. Aberdeen coastguard contacted the Royal National Lifeboat Institution at about 1.50pm. | |
Boats were sent from Wick, Invergordon in Highland, and Buckie in Moray, towards the Beatrice oil field area, supported by a helicopter from Stornoway in the Western Isles. The crew from the Buckie boat reported that two people were taken from the sea by helicopter. | |
It is not the first incident involving aircraft from RAF Lossiemouth. An official investigation found that RAF Tornado aircraft have been involved in crashes in Scotland in recent years. | |
In January last year two RAF crew were rescued after their Tornado GR4 jet from the base came down in the sea off the west coast of Scotland. The crew ejected before the plane landed in Loch Ewe, near Gairloch, Wester Ross. | |
The Tornado GR4 is a two-seat attack aircraft, capable of delivering a variety of weapons and reaching a maximum altitude of 15,000 metres (50,000ft). | The Tornado GR4 is a two-seat attack aircraft, capable of delivering a variety of weapons and reaching a maximum altitude of 15,000 metres (50,000ft). |
In July 2009 an RAF pilot and navigator were killed when their Tornado F3 jet crashed into a hillside in Argyll. | |
Flight Lieutenant Kenneth Thompson, 27, and Flight Lieutenant Nigel Morton, 43, died in the crash near the village of Arrochar. | Flight Lieutenant Kenneth Thompson, 27, and Flight Lieutenant Nigel Morton, 43, died in the crash near the village of Arrochar. |
The aircraft was an RAF Tornado F3 based in RAF Leuchars, Fife, on a routine flight. |