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One of Russia's Richest Women Killed in German Plane Crash

Natalia Fileva, a co-owner of Russia’s largest private airline and one of the country’s richest women, died in a plane crash.

One of Russia's Richest Women Killed in German Plane Crash
Policemen and aviation experts investigate the wreckage of a business plane in Frankfurt. (Source: AP/PTI)

(Bloomberg) --

Natalia Fileva, a co-owner of Russia’s largest private airline and one of the country’s richest women, died in a plane crash in Germany on Sunday.

Fileva, 55, was chairman and a major shareholder in S7, which began its growth in the 1990s and is Russia’s second-biggest airline after Aeroflot. “The circumstances of the tragedy aren’t known yet,” the Russian carrier said in a statement. Fileva’s fortune is valued at at least $670 million, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

One of Russia's Richest Women Killed in German Plane Crash

Fileva ran S7 with her husband Vladislav Filev. The airline rebranded from Siberia Airlines and painted its planes green after a 2004 plane crash caused by a terror attack. The group, which also includes Globus Airlines, carried about 16 million passengers last year, according to Russia’s civil-aviation agency.

Her ambitions extended beyond air travel. In 2016, S7 agreed to acquire the Sea Launch platform to compete with Elon Musk’s SpaceX in launching satellites. The deal was closed last year, and S7 hired a chief designer to develop a cargo spacecraft.

The single-engine Epic LT aircraft carrying Fileva went down while approaching the airport at Egelsbach, southwest of Frankfurt, according to S7. Egelsbach is a small airfield often used by passengers seeking discretion.

One of Russia's Richest Women Killed in German Plane Crash

German media reported that three people were killed when the Epic LT crashed into an asparagus field and caught fire. The plane was coming in from Cannes, France, with two passengers and a pilot aboard, according to Frankfurter Rundschau.

German Investigation

About eight minutes before impact, the pilot signed off with German air traffic control and began a visual final approach, which is a normal procedure, the newspaper quoted an aviation spokesman as saying.

The plane was almost completely destroyed in the incident, according to a spokesman for local authorities, adding that investigators were at the scene early Monday. Three officials from Germany’s federal air-incident authority are also examining the wreckage.

The Epic LT was a private business jet run by S7. It was involved in an accident in 2015. While Filev was piloting the plane with an instructor on board, the landing gear didn’t deploy properly, and the plane had to land on its belly, according to Forbes Russia.

--With assistance from William Wilkes and Alex Sazonov.

To contact the reporters on this story: Dina Khrennikova in Moscow at dkhrennikova@bloomberg.net;Ilya Khrennikov in Moscow at ikhrennikov@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Ludden at jludden@bloomberg.net, Andrew Blackman, Chris Reiter

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