The wreckage of an Air Algerie plane missing since early on Thursday 
with 116 people on board has been found in Mali near the Burkina Faso 
border, an army co-ordinator in Ouagadougou said.
"We have found 
the Algerian plane. The wreck has been located ... 50km north of the 
Burkina Faso border" in the Malian region of Gossi, said General Gilbert
 Diendiere of the Burkina Faso army.
"At the moment we have no further information on [the fate of] the passengers, but our teams are hard at work," he said. 
Diendiere gave no indication as to what may have caused the plane to crash.
A witness had earlier reported seeing the plane "falling" in the Gossi region.
Flight
 AH5017, which took off from Ouagadougou bound for Algiers with 51 
French nationals aboard, according to Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, 
went missing amid reports of heavy storms, company sources and officials
 said.
The airline said there were also 24 Burkinabe, eight 
Lebanese, six Algerians, six Spanish, five Canadians, four Germans and 
two Luxembourg nationals on board.
The flight had been presumed 
lost even before French President Francois Hollande appeared on TV to 
announce: "Everything leads us to believe that the plane has crashed."
He said the plane's Spanish crew had signalled they were altering course "due to particularly difficult weather conditions".
"Contact
 was lost with the McDonnell Douglas 83 at 13:47 [local time], a little 
after the pilots said they were diverting from the route due to 
meteorological reasons," Fabius said earlier.
Algerian radio 
quoted Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal as saying the plane dropped off 
the radar at Gao, 500km from the Algerian border.
Poor visibility 
Mali,
 Algeria, Niger and France co-ordinated their search efforts under the 
umbrella of the French-led military intervention in Mali, Operation 
Serval.
"Even though the aircraft was above Mali it was in 
airspace managed by the control centre in Niamey in Niger," an air 
traffic control official told AFP.
Aviation sources told AFP the MD-83 was leased from Spanish company Swiftair.
Its
 six-member crew were all Spanish, said Spain's airline pilots' union 
Sepla, and Swiftair confirmed the aircraft went missing less than an 
hour after take-off.
"The plane was not far from the Algerian 
frontier when the crew was asked to make a detour because of poor 
visibility and to prevent the risk of collision with another aircraft on
 the Algiers-Bamako route," an airline source said.
"Contact was lost after the change of course."
The
 plane had apparently been given the "all clear" following an inspection
 in France only this week, French civil aviation authority DGAC said.
In
 France, two crisis units were set up, one at the DGAC and another at 
the foreign ministry, in addition to two further centres at Charles De 
Gaulle Airport in Paris and at Marseille airport.
DGAC said many passengers had been due to catch onward connecting flights to Paris and Marseille.
France's minister responsible for French abroad, Fleur Pellerin, was due in Ouagadougou later on Thursday. 
One French family had seven people on the plane, a brother of one passenger told AFP. 
"There was my brother, his wife and their four children, plus my nephew," Amadou Ouedraogo said via telephone. 
Emergency planA controller in Mali, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the area was rocked by "strong storms" overnight.
Air
 Algerie, in a statement carried by national news agency APS, said it 
had initiated an "emergency plan" in the search for AH5017, which flies 
the four-hour passenger route four times a week.
In Cuba, the 
daughter of President Raul Castro assured journalists she was alive and 
well, contradicting reports that she had been on board the doomed 
flight.
Mariela Castro, a sexologist and gay rights activist, said
 she had been told there was another passenger of the same name aboard 
flight AH5017.
The crash comes at the end of a disastrous week for the aviation industry.
On 17 July, a Malaysia Airlines plane crashed in eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 people on board. 
A Taiwanese aircraft crashed in torrential rain in southwest Taiwan on Wednesday, killing 48. 
In
 February, a C-130 military aircraft carrying 78 people in Algeria's 
mountainous northeast crashed, killing more than 70 people.
The 
plane had been flying from the desert garrison town of Tamanrasset in 
Algeria's deep south to Constantine, 320km east of Algiers.
Tamanrasset
 was also the site of the country's worst-ever civilian air disaster, in
 March 2003 that killed all but one of the 103 people on board an Air 
Algerie Boeing 737-200.
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