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(Corrects spelling of airport to Ndjili from Ndili)
By Joe Bavier
KINSHASA (Reuters) - A Russian-made cargo plane with 17 people on board crashed and exploded on Thursday in a crowded neighborhood of Democratic Republic of Congo's capital Kinshasa, airport officials and witnesses said.
A United Nations spokesman said there were "many dead."
The Antonov aircraft belonging to Congolese airline Africa 1 came down on several shacks in the Kingasani neighborhood near Ndjili international airport, the sources said.
"There were 17 people on board," said airport protocol official Jean-Claude Bakongo, who said a major explosion followed the crash.
"I saw it fall in the Kingasani neighborhood."
Another airport security official who went to the crash site told Reuters that fire fighters were struggling to reach the wreckage in the shanty town.
"There are at least four houses burning, the airplane is burning ... There's a lot of smoke and flames, everybody in the houses must be dead," he said.
"People say the plane was overloaded."
Air travel is notoriously dangerous in Congo. Ageing planes suffer from a lack of maintenance and spare parts but they are often the only way to transport people and goods across the vast African country slowly recovering from a 1998-2003 civil war.