STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Death toll rises to 18, state media reports; three people are hospitalized
- Foreign tourists are from Hong Kong, Japan, Britain, France and Hungary
- A gas explosion caused the balloon to fall about 300 meters (almost 1,000 feet)
It was the deadliest hot air balloon accident in the world in at least 20 years.
Tourists who have taken
similar rides over southern Egypt marvel over the vantage point from the
air -- a beige desert valley giving way to green farmland.
The 21 people aboard the
balloon probably enjoyed a similar landscape before falling 300 meters
(almost 1,000 feet) in the city of Luxor, the Egyptian Interior Ministry
said.
A gas explosion caused the crash, state-run EgyNews reported.
Passengers in the balloon
included 19 foreign tourists: nine from Hong Kong, four from Japan,
three from Britain, two from France and one from Hungary, officials
said.
An Egyptian pilot and another Egyptian were also on board, Luxor province spokesman Badawi al-Masri said.
Three people -- two Britons and the pilot -- are hospitalized.
Tourists killed in hot air balloon blast
Balloon rides offering
panoramic aerial views of the Nile River and the ancient temples of
Karnak and Hatshepsut are a popular tourist attraction in Luxor, about a
nine-hour drive southeast of Cairo.
"You can see Valley of the Kings in the background
bordered by farmland," Pauline Liang of Vancouver, Canada, told CNN's
iReport last year. "Below were banana farms, and behind us was the city
of Luxor. There was a great contrast between desert landscape, lush
farmland and urban development."
Tuesday's crash prompted Gov. Izzat Saad of Luxor province to ban all hot air balloon flights until further notice.
The last hot air balloon
accident in Luxor occurred in 2009, when 16 foreign tourists were
injured after a balloon struck a cell phone transmission tower.
Until Tuesday's
incident, the deadliest accident in recent memory took place in 1989,
when 13 people were killed after two hot air balloons collided in
Australia.
Egyptian government
spokesman Alaa Hadidi announced that the Cabinet will form a committee
from the Ministry of Civil Aviation to investigate the cause of
Tuesday's accident, EgyNews said.
CULLED FROM www.cnn.com
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