Bad weather is seen as a possible cause for the crash of a small passenger plane in Nepal that was navigating between mountains in an area that's popular for treks and sightseeing. The plane, with a crew of three and 20 passengers, reportedly flew into the side of a mountain.

"All 23 people, including three crew members and two infants, who were on board the ill-fated Tara Twin-Otter plane, were killed in the crash at a remote location in Myagdi district of western Nepal," The Himalayan Times reports, citing local civil aviation officials.

The newspaper adds that two of the passengers were foreigners — a woman from China and a man from Kuwait. It also says that the airline has said the plane was a new one, with less than 300 hours of flying time logged.

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Emergency crews were hampered by bad weather as they searched for the plane, which lost contact with air traffic control shortly after takeoff in Pokhara, Nepal's second-largest city, which lies about 125 miles west-northwest of Kathmandu. Its destination was Jomsom, in a conservation area to the north.

NPR's Julie McCarthy reports that investigators are looking into a possible connection between the crash and an avalanche that had been blanketing the area with a huge dust cloud since Tuesday.

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