BBC news.
I. Indonesia air crash ‘kills 78’
An Indonesian military transport plane carrying troops and their families has crashed on the island of Java, killing at least 78 people, officials say.
At least two people died on the ground when the plane came down in a village, hitting houses before skidding into a rice field where it caught fire.
An air force spokesman warned the death toll could rise further, as operations at the crash site continued.
The plane had been flying from Jakarta to eastern Java when it crashed.
It missed landing at Iswahyudi air force base and struck houses in the village of Geplak, 4km away, at around 0630 local time (2330 GMT).
Visibility appears to have been good and there is no indication yet of why the plane crashed.
Initial reports say the last contact with the crew was a few minutes before the plane came down, as it was making its final approach to land.
Tail intact
Air force spokesman Bambang Sulistyo said the C-130 Hercules had been carrying 112 passengers and crew. At least 10 children were reported to have been on board.
In pictures: Indonesian air crash
TV pictures showed soldiers with stretchers trying to evacuate casualties from the scene. Reports say the site is difficult to reach because it is on the edge of a rice field.
“About 15m of the tail is still intact but the body to the front is broken and burnt,” said a local official in the district of Magetan.
Witnesses spoke of hearing a large explosion while the plane was still in the air, and then seeing it split apart.
“One of the wings fell off,” a local villager was quoted as saying on the Kompas newspaper’s website.
“Then the plane nose-dived into the houses.”
The location of the crash is near the border of the districts of Madiun and Magetan, about 150km south-west of Indonesia’s second-biggest city,
Surabaya.
Air force accidents
Indonesia’s air force has long complained of being underfunded and handicapped by a US ban on weapons sales, correspondents say. The ban has recently been lifted.
It has suffered a series of accidents, including one involving a Fokker 27 plane that crashed into an airport hangar in western Java last month, killing all 24 aboard.
An Indonesian air force Hercules overshot the runway at Wamena airport in Papua on 10 May. One person was reportedly injured in that incident.
In response, the air force said it would check its Hercules fleet, which is being upgraded with airframe and engine capability improvements.
There have also been a number of commercial airline crashes in Indonesia in recent years which have killed more than 120 people.
In 2007, all Indonesian airlines including national carrier Garuda were banned from the European Union, being deemed unsafe.
II. MPs to debate changes to expenses
Commons Speaker Michael Martin, who has announced his resignation over the expenses row, has put forward emergency proposals aimed at stopping abuses.
The measures – agreed to by party leaders – include a £1,250a-month cap on rent and mortgage interest payments.
They would also ban second homes claims for furniture, cleaning and stamp duty.
Additionally, MPs will not be allowed to “flip” the designation of their second home during 2009/10.
Mr Martin said all parties were now committed to accepting the recommendations from Sir Christopher Kelly’s Committee on Standards in Public Life, provided they met certain tests.
Other measures announced by the Speaker included: