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Aeroflot Flight 214 was a crash that occurred on 6 August 1955 involving an Ilyushin Il-14 aircraft operated by Aeroflot with tail number СССР-Л5057. The aircraft was operating a flight on the route Moscow–Stalingrad (now Volgograd)–Moscow. During the flight, the right engine failed and caught fire. The developing fire led to the destruction of the wing. The aircraft lost control and crashed. All 25 people on board were killed, including 10 members of a delegation of Norwegian women who had arrived in the USSR at the invitation of the Anti-Fascist Committee of Soviet Women, and three of its staff members who were accompanying the guests. A government commission led by the deputy chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Mikhail Krunichev, arrived at the scene to investigate the causes of the accident.
Circumstances of the accident
During the war in Nazi-occupied Norway, inspired by the heroism of the defenders of Stalingrad, activists from various public organizations secretly sewed a Soviet flag, which they later presented to the Soviet military after the liberation of the country. The flag was delivered to Stalingrad and was kept in a museum there. The women's delegation was invited to visit the city. On their way back from Stalingrad, they were on the ill-fated plane.
Casualties
Norwegian delegation
Gullborg Nyberg (Norwegian: Gullborg Nyberg, b. 1909) — from the Women's Committee of the National Confederation of Trade Unions