<p>Vilnius, Lithuania: A DHL cargo plane crashed into a house as it made its approach to land at Lithuania’s Vilnius airport early on Monday, killing one person and injuring three others on the aircraft, officials said.</p>.<p>The flight was operated by SWIFT airline on behalf of DHL and had taken off from Leipzig, Germany before the plane crashed around 0330 GMT, a spokesperson for the governmental National Crisis Management Center said.</p>.<p>An airport spokesperson said the plane was a Boeing 737-400. All of the people in the house survived, he added.</p>.<p>The spokesperson said there was nothing to suggest an explosion preceded the crash. "At the moment we don't have any data that there was an explosion", he said.</p>.<p>Police told a press conference 12 people had been evacuated from the house hit by the plane.</p>.<p>Rescue services said the plane hit the ground and slid at least 100 metres (110 yards) before crashing into the building.</p><p>The flight had departed from Leipzig at 0208 GMT, Flightradar24 said on the X social media platform.</p><p>Firefighters were seen at 0530 GMT pouring water onto a smoking building some 1.3 km (0.8 mile) north of the airport runway. A large police and ambulance presence was seen nearby and several nearby major streets were cordoned off.</p>.<p>Germany is investigating several fires caused by incendiary devices hidden inside parcels at a warehouse in Leipzig earlier this year, the country's prosecutor general said in October.</p><p>British counter-terrorism police said shortly afterwards that they were investigating a warehouse fire in July, caused by a package catching alight, and liaising with other European law enforcement agencies to see if there was a connection with similar incidents elsewhere.</p>
<p>Vilnius, Lithuania: A DHL cargo plane crashed into a house as it made its approach to land at Lithuania’s Vilnius airport early on Monday, killing one person and injuring three others on the aircraft, officials said.</p>.<p>The flight was operated by SWIFT airline on behalf of DHL and had taken off from Leipzig, Germany before the plane crashed around 0330 GMT, a spokesperson for the governmental National Crisis Management Center said.</p>.<p>An airport spokesperson said the plane was a Boeing 737-400. All of the people in the house survived, he added.</p>.<p>The spokesperson said there was nothing to suggest an explosion preceded the crash. "At the moment we don't have any data that there was an explosion", he said.</p>.<p>Police told a press conference 12 people had been evacuated from the house hit by the plane.</p>.<p>Rescue services said the plane hit the ground and slid at least 100 metres (110 yards) before crashing into the building.</p><p>The flight had departed from Leipzig at 0208 GMT, Flightradar24 said on the X social media platform.</p><p>Firefighters were seen at 0530 GMT pouring water onto a smoking building some 1.3 km (0.8 mile) north of the airport runway. A large police and ambulance presence was seen nearby and several nearby major streets were cordoned off.</p>.<p>Germany is investigating several fires caused by incendiary devices hidden inside parcels at a warehouse in Leipzig earlier this year, the country's prosecutor general said in October.</p><p>British counter-terrorism police said shortly afterwards that they were investigating a warehouse fire in July, caused by a package catching alight, and liaising with other European law enforcement agencies to see if there was a connection with similar incidents elsewhere.</p>