There were 5 Armenians aboard the plane that crashed in South Sudan
A cargo plane has crashed in South Sudan shortly after take-off from Juba International Airport, killing at least 41 people.
The aircraft crashed on the banks of the River Nile around a mile from the airport, according to an official and a Reuters witness.
CNN reported that eighteen people were aboard the flight: 12 South Sudanese passengers and six crew members -- five Armenians and one Russian, according to Ateny Wek Ateny, a press secretary in the South Sudan President's office.
Only one crew member and a child survived.
An unknown number of people were also killed on the ground when the plane came down near a group of fishermen.
"We don't know the number of people that were killed on the ground," Mr Ateny said, according to news.sky.com.
He added that the aircraft was a Russian-made cargo plane bound for the Paloch oil fields in Upper Nile state.
The Russian news agency Interfax, citing a source, said preliminary findings indicate the plane did not belong to any Russian airlines.
A police officer told Reuters at least 41 people died, adding that the death toll is likely to rise.