Antonov An-26-100 crash-landed in 1997 at the airstrip of
Gogrial. The plane was hit by
SPLA-fire and had to make an emergency landing.
1970s • 23 May 1976: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26567) crashed short of the runway near
Teply Klyuch Airport,
Russia. • 14 July 1977: A
National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down by
UNITA rebels near
Cuangar, killing 30 people on board. • 18 August 1977: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26536) landed hard at
Ust-Kuyga Airport due to pilot error; no casualties. • 9 December 1978: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26547) lost control and crashed shortly after takeoff from Cherskiy Airport due to a shifted load, killing all seven on board. The cargo had not been secured properly. • 26 March 1979: Aeroflot Flight 37293, an An-26 (CCCP-26569), struck a wooded hillside near
Baykit, Russia, killing four of 12 on board.
1980s • 12 December 1980: A
Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by guerrilla forces in
Angola near the border with
Namibia, killing five people on board. • 23 December 1981: Aeroflot Flight 22237, an An-26 (CCCP-26505), crashed while on approach to Severo-Yeniseisk Airport in poor weather during an attempted go-around after descending too soon, killing two of seven on board. The flight mechanic and navigator were drunk. • 14 January 1982: An
Ethiopian Air Force An-26 crashed near
Addis Ababa, killing 73 Ethiopian, Libyan and Cuban troops. This accident remains the deadliest involving the An-26. • 11 February 1982: Vietnam People's Air Force An-26
26264 was shot down by two Royal Thai Air Force Northrop F-5Es and crashed in a rice field near Prachinburi, Thailand, during an intelligence-gathering mission from Phnom Penh, reportedly killing one of 13 on board. • 15 March 1982: A
Soviet Navy An-26 (MSN 6805) crashed shortly after a night-time take off from
Anapa Airport when the flaps were retracted prematurely, killing all nine people on board. • 29 November 1982: a
TAAG Angola Airlines An-26 (D2-TAB) flew into a mountain in the
Bibala region, killing all 15 people on board. • 23 December 1982: An Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26627) crashed on takeoff from Rostov Airport, killing all 16 on board. The aircraft was overloaded. • 6 May 1983: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 hit trees on a night-time approach in heavy snow as it was trying to land at
Klyuchi, Klyuchevsky District, Altai Krai, killing 33 of the 37 people on board. • 3 July 1984: A
Peruvian Air Force An-26 (FAP-377) crashed into mountains northeast of
Lima, killing all five people on board. • 22 January 1985: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 operating in
Afghanistan exceeded the maximum allowable speed and broke apart, killing all eight people on board. • 3 May 1985: Soviet Air Force An-26
101 red (callsign "CCCP-26492") collided in mid-air with
Aeroflot Flight 8381, a Tupolev Tu-134, due to ATC errors, killing all 94 on board both aircraft. • 4 September 1985: A
Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An-26 (YA-BAM)
was shot down by a
SAM near
Kandahar, killing all 52 people on board. • 30 March 1986: A
Mozambique Air Force An-26 crashed while trying to land at
Pemba Airport. All three crew and 41 of the 46 passengers were killed. • 6 December 1986: a
Hungarian Air Force An-26 (MSN 2210) crashed after take-off from
Budapest-Ferihegy Airport, most likely because of icing. Four of the five people on board were killed. • 9 February 1987: an
Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down by
Mujahideen guerrillas shortly after takeoff from
Kabul International Airport, killing all 36 people on board. • 19 February 1987: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 crashed in fog near
Stadnitsa while attempting to land at
Vinnytsia, killing all nine people on board. • 6 March 1987: an
Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26007) struck a mountain near
Almaty after failing to change heading, killing all nine people on board. • 11 June 1987: a
Bakhtar Afghan Airlines An-25 (YA-BAL)
was shot down by rebels near
Khost, killing 53 of the 55 people on board. • 18 June 1987: a
Peruvian Air Force An-26 (FAP-392) crashed into a mountain near Saposoa, killing all 46 people on board. • 13 August 1987: an
Afghan Air Force An-26 was reportedly shot down, killing all 12 on board. • 1 September 1987: an
Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down near
Khost, killing all right people on board. • 13 September 1987: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by
Afghanistan rebels near
Kunduz, killing all 15 people on board. • 16 September 1987:
Vietnam People's Air Force An-26
285 flying from
Hanoi to
Ho Chi Minh City crashed at
Bảo Lộc while on approach to Ho Chi Minh City, killing all 31 crew and passengers on board, mostly military personnel and their family members. Wreckage was found in 1989. • 22 October 1987: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down near
Jalalabad Airport, killing all eight people on board. • 21 December 1987: A
Soviet Air Force An-26 flying from
Kabul to
Bagram was shot down by a
Stinger missile shortly after takeoff. The no. 1 engine was hit and shrapnel punctured the fuel tank. Smoke entered the cabin. Five of the six crew members bailed out safely, however the pilot jumped out at an altitude too low to open the parachute and did not survive. • 10 April 1988: an
Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down near
Maymana, killing all 29 people on board. • 20 April 1988: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 (MSN 11808) crashed shortly after takeoff from
Chkalovsky Air Base when the right engine failed, killing all six people on board. • 27 April 1988: a
Cuban Air Force An-26
T-237 was accidentally shot down by Cuban troops stationed at
Techamutete, Angola, killing all 29 people on board. • 24 June 1988: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 was shot down by
Mujahideen rebels after takeoff from
Kabul International Airport, killing all five people on board. • 19 November 1988: an
Afghan Air Force An-26 was shot down by the
Pakistan Air Force near
Parachinar, killing all 30 people on board. Afghan officials said the plane had crossed the border after suffering mechanical problems while Pakistani officials said it had failed to identify itself. • 10 December 1988: an
Ariana Afghan Airlines An-26 was shot down over Pakistan by the
Pakistan Air Force, killing all 25 people on board. • 10 March 1989: a
National Air Force of Angola An-26 crashed at
Cazombo, killing all five people on board. • 18 June 1989: an
Ariana Afghan Airlines An-26 (YA-BAK) crash landed on a hill near
Zabol after the ramp was opened in flight, killing six of the 39 people on board. • 19 July 1989: an Aeroflot An-26 (CCCP-26685) was on an ice observation flight over the East Siberian Sea to guide ships when it crashed at Cape Kibera after the left wing hit a cliff during a turn that was too close to the shore, killing all 10 on board. • 23 July 1989: a
National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down by
UNITA rebels near Chana, killing 42 of the 48 people on board. • 8 September 1989: a
Cuban Air and Air Defense Force An-26 (MSN 3805) crashed into the sea near Playa de Baracoa during a nighttime exercise, killing seven of the eight people on board. • 26 October 1989: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 flew into a mountain in bad weather near
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, killing all 37 people on board.
1990s • 1990s: Soviet Air Force An-26
01 red burned out on the ground at Orenburg Air Base following an APU fire. • mid 1990s: Russian Air Force An-26
RA-47415 force-landed at Belgorod Airport and was withdrawn from use and cancelled from the Russian register in 2001. Although the aircraft was planned to become a cinema for the "Rolan Bykov Fund" in Belgorod, this was abandoned in 2004 because some of the radioactive sensors had not been removed. • 23 March 1990: Cubana de Aviacion Flight 7406, an An-26 (CU-T1436), overran the runway at Antonio Maceo Airport following an aborted takeoff, killing four of 46 on board. • 5 May 1990: a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 crashed near Sparfayev island while on a flight from
Magadan, killing all seven people on board. • 22 February 1991: a
National Air Force of Angola An-26 was shot down near
Cazombo Airport, killing all 47 people on board. • 15 August 1991: due to an air traffic controller's mistaken direction a
Soviet Air Forces An-26 hit a mountain after take-off from
Burevestnik Airport, killing all nine people on board. • 27 February 1992:
German Air Force An-26 "52+10" crashed after a hard landing. None of the crew members was injured. • 8 April 1992:
Yasir Arafat's An-26 crashed during a sandstorm. Of the 13 on board, both pilots and an engineer were killed. • 23 April 1993: A MIAT Mongolian Airlines An-26 (BNMAU-14102) struck the side of Marz Mountain, Zavkhan Province, Mongolia while descending for Ölgii, killing all 32 on board. • 17 June 1993: A Tajikistan Airlines An-26 (
26035) stalled, spun down and crashed into a hillside 22 mi north of Tbilisi, Georgia, after encountering severe turbulence, killing all 33 on board. • 26 December 1993: A Kuban Airlines An-26 (RA-26141) operating as
Flight 5719 stalled and crashed upside down while landing at Leninakan Airport due to overloading, killing 35 of 36 on board. • 13 July 1994: A Russian Air Force An-26 was stolen from Kubinka AFB by an engineer planning to commit suicide. He circled Lyakhovo at 300–2000 feet until the aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed, killing him. • 31 July 1994: An
Air Ukraine An-26B (UR-26207), operating on behalf of the UN, was reportedly shot down and crashed near Saborsko, Croatia, killing all 7 people on board. • 16 January 1995: An
Angolan Air Force An-26 was downed by rebel forces in the north of the country, killing all six occupants. • 16 March 1995: A Central Region Airlines An-26B (RA-26084) struck a hill and crashed near Ossora Airport while on approach due to crew errors, killing nine of 10 on board. • 31 August 1995: a
Malian Air Force An-26 (TZ-347) flew into a mountain near
Thessaloniki Airport in bad weather, killing all six people on board. • 17 December 1995: Terrorist Kim Davy alias Niels Holck from Denmark dropped several tonnes of lethal weapons, ammunition, explosives and triggers by An-26 in Purulia district of West Bengal State of India. The plane was forced to land in Bombay, where his accomplices were arrested. • 1997:
Sudan Air Force An-26
7711 force-landed at
Gogrial Airport after it was struck by SPLA ground fire. • 2 September 1998: A Permtransavia An-26 (RA-20628) operating for Prestavia, crashed near Malanje Airport, Angola, after the pilot reported an engine fire, killing all 24 on board; the wreckage was found in 2003. Some reports stated that the aircraft was shot down by UNITA forces. • 21 January 1999:
Nicaraguan Air Force An-26
152 crashed after getting too low on approach and striking a tree near
Bluefields Airport, killing all 28 people on board.
2000s • 30 March 2000: an An-26 chartered from Ukrainian company Avialinii AAR crashed near
Anuradhapura Airport while carrying
Sri Lanka Army troops, killing all 40 on board. The cause of the accident is unclear. • 12 August 2000: a STAER airlines An-26 crashed near
Tshikapa while trying to return to
Kinshasa Airport, killing all 27 on board. • 31 October 2000: an ACA-Ancargo An-26 (D2-FDI) crashed 20 minutes after take-off from
Saurimo Airport, killing all 49 people on board.
UNITA rebels say they shot it down. • 4 April 2001: a
Sudanese Air Force An-26 crashed on take-off in a sandstorm from Adar Yel, killing the deputy defence minister and 13 high-ranking officers. Another 16 passengers survived. • 21 February 2002: a
Russian Navy An-26 crashed after striking treetops while on final approach to
Lakhta air base, killing 17 of the 20 people on board. • 29 November 2003: a
Congolese Air Force An-26
9T-TAD crashed during takeoff due to a burst tyre, killing 20 of the 24 people on board and 13 people on the ground. • 5 May 2005: a chartered Aeroworld An-26 (EK-26060) crashed shortly after take-off from
Kisangani Bangoka International Airport, killing 10 of the 11 people on board. • 9 August 2005: a
Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed in
Mukalla, killing one of its occupants and injuring 22 others. • 5 September 2005: A
Kavatshi Airlines An-26B (ER-AZT) operating on a non-scheduled passenger flight struck a tree and crashed on approach to
Isiro Airport in
Matari, killing all 11 people on board. • 9 September 2005: An
Air Kasai An-26B (9Q-CFD) operating on a non-scheduled passenger flight crashed 50 km (31 miles) north of
Brazzaville, killing all 13 people on board. • 11 February 2006: a
Sudanese Air Force An-26 crashed into a building upon landing at
Aweil, South Sudan after the front tyre burst, killing all 20 people on board. • 9 January 2007: An
AerianTur-M Antonov An-26 (ER-26068)
crashed while attempting to land at the U.S. military base in
Balad, Iraq, killing 34 of 35 on board. Although the aircraft crashed due to fog, some eyewitness and sources state that the aircraft was shot down by a missile. • 4 October 2007: An
Africa One An-26 (9Q-COS)
crashed into the
Kinshasa neighbourhood of Kimbaseke just after
takeoff. 21 out of 22 people on board and 28 people on the ground died. Initial reports indicate a lost propeller. • 8 April 2008: A
Vietnam People's Air Force An-26 crashed in a field in the
Thanh Trì district, killing all five on board.
2010s • 18 March 2010: An
Exin An-26B (SP-FDO) made an emergency landing on the
Lake Ülemiste, close to
Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport. None of the six crew members was injured. Initial reports indicated failure of one of the turboprop power plants. • 25 August 2010: An Exin An-26B (SP-FDP) rejected takeoff from Tallinn's runway 08 at high speed when the gear collapsed or retracted during the takeoff roll. The airplane skidded to a stop on its belly, no injuries occurred. • 6 June 2011:
Solenta Aviation Flight 122A, an An-26 (TR-LII), crashed in the sea near
Libreville, Gabon, during an attempted go-around following hydraulic problems. Four people on board were rescued and transported to a local hospital, but were not seriously injured. The aircraft was operating on behalf of DHL. • 24 November 2011: A
Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed outside
Sanaa due to technical problems. 15 crew members and passengers died. • 21 November 2012: a
Yemeni Air Force An-26 crashed close to
Sanaa International Airport, killing all 10 people on board. • 19 August 2012: An Alfa Airlines An-26-100 (ST-ARL)
struck a mountain during its second approach to the Talodi airfield in
South Kordofan, Sudan. All 26 passengers on board and six crew members died. • 17 December 2012: A Amazon Sky An-2,
OB-1887-P, crashed in mountainous terrain in Peru due to icing, killing all 4 on board. • 21 February 2014: A Libyan Air Cargo An-26 (5A-DOW), operating an ambulance flight, crashed in a farm near Grombalia, 60 km short of Tunis-Carthage Airport, after one of its engines caught fire. The accident resulted in the death of all its 11 occupants: six crew members, two doctors and three patients. • 14 July 2014: Ukraine Air Force An-26
19 blue flying at was shot down and crashed near Izvaryne, Ukraine, killing two of six on board. (confirmed to be shot using
Buk missile system). U.S. officials would later say evidence suggested the aircraft had been fired on from inside Russian territory • 18 January 2015:
Syrian Air Force An-26
YK-AND crashed while attempting to land at the besieged Abu al-Duhur military airport in
Idlib Governorate, Syria, killing all 30 on board. • 9 March 2016: A
True Aviation An-26B (S2-AGZ)
crashed into the
Bay of Bengal near
Cox's Bazar while attempting to return to
Cox's Bazar Airport following an engine failure, killing three of four on board. • 30 April 2016: A
Sudan Air Force An-26 crashed during a landing attempt at
Al-Ubayyid. All five crew members died. • 20 March 2017: A
South Supreme Airlines An-26B (S9-TLZ) was destroyed by fire at
Wau Airport, South Sudan, after crashing into a fire truck during landing; 37 of the 45 on board the aircraft were injured. • 29 April 2017:
Aerogaviota Flight FAR1436, an An-26 (CU-T1406), crashed in the Loma de la Pimienta Mountains near Las Terrazas, Cuba, killing all eight on board. The aircraft was operating on behalf of the Cuban Air Force. • 30 May 2017: Russian Aerospace Forces An-26
RF-36160 crashed at Balashov Airfield during a training flight after descending too soon, killing one of six on board. • 28 August 2017: A Coco Aviation An-26B (EK-26006) overran the runway at Maban Airstrip and was destroyed by the consequent fire. The crew survived. • 14 October 2017: A Valan Air An-26 (ER-AVB) chartered by the French Military
crashed shortly before landing at
Abidjan, the
Ivory Coast capital. Four people were killed and six were injured. • 6 March 2018: Russian Aerospace Forces An-26
RF-92955 crashed at
Khmeimim Air Base. All 33 passengers and six crew died in the incident. • 20 December 2018: A Gomair An-26 (9S-AGB) crashed 19 nautical miles short of
Kinshasa with 7 or 8 people on board. The aircraft was found more than 24 hours later by a local. The aircraft was carrying election materials on behalf of the Central Electoral National Independent Commission (CENI). • 24 December 2018: Congolese Air Force An-26
9T-TAB crashed as it overshot the runway at
Beni Airport in
North Kivu province. The aircraft was reportedly transporting troops, and the crash resulted in 38 people being taken to hospital.
2020s • 22 August 2020: A
South West Aviation An-26 (EX-126) lost power during take-off at
Juba Airport in South Sudan and
crashed into Hai Referendum residential area on the outskirts of the airport. Eight of the nine occupants on board killed alongside nine on the ground. • 25 September 2020: Ukraine Air Force An-26
76 yellow with cadets of the
Ivan Kozhedub National Air Force University crashed and immediately caught fire in
Ukraine's
Kharkiv Oblast. • 13 March 2021: A Kazakh Border Guards An-26 crashed short of the runway while attempting to land at
Almaty Airport killing four of the six occupants on board. • 6 July 2021: A
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Air An-26, crashed on a cliff in the vicinity of
Palana, killing all 22 passengers and six crew members. Most of the debris slid down into the
Okhotsk Sea. • 22 September 2021: a technical flight that disappeared from flight radars 38 km from
Khabarovsk crashed, killing all six members of the crew. • 2 November 2021: Optimum Aviation Antonov An-26, registered as TR-NGT, crashed near the
White Nile just after take-off from
Juba International Airport, South Sudan. All five crew were killed. • 24 February 2022:
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine:
Ukrainian Air Force An-26
59 blue was shot down near Zhukivtsi by Russian fire. Five of the fourteen people on board were killed. • 24 February 2022:
Russian Aerospace Forces An-26
RF-36074 crashed near Voronezh. All crew reported dead. • 27 February 2022: An Antonov Airlines An-26-100 (UR-13395) was confirmed to be destroyed in Hostomel, Kyiv during the attack. • 22 April 2022: A Constanta Airlines An-26B-100 (UR-UZB) crashed after it struck power lines over
Mykhailivka in the
Zaporizhzhia Oblast, killing one of three crew. • 14 June 2024: Utair Flight 9706, an Antonov An-26-100, crash-landed 1 km from
Utrenny Airport in bad weather injuring 3 of the 41 on board. • 25 February 2025: A
Sudanese Air Force Antonov An-26 crashed in a residential area shortly after takeoff from
Wadi Seidna Air Base. All 17 people on board were killed, as well as 29 people on the ground. • 25 September 2025: Two
Russian Aerospace Forces Antonov An-26, based in Crimea, hit by Ukrainian drones and, according to Ukrainian reporting, destroyed. • 31 March 2026:
A Russian Air Force Antonov An-26 crashed into a cliff in Crimea, killing 30 people. ==Aircraft on display==