Twenty-six people, most of them air cadets, have been killed in a military plane crash in Ukraine, officials say.
The aircraft, an Antonov-26, came down near the eastern city of Kharkiv.
The plane was carrying 20 cadets and seven officers from Kharkiv Air Force University and was on a training flight. Only one person survived.
The crash is being investigated. Officials say preliminary findings suggest the captain, not cadets, were flying the plane when it crashed.
The plane came down about 2km (1.2 miles) from a military airport in the town of Chuhuiv, the emergency ministry said.
Fire broke out at the site and was later extinguished.
An eyewitness told Reuters news agency he had seen a man in flames running from the wreckage.
“Another car stopped behind us. We took a fire extinguisher and ran with another driver to help him,” he said.
Two people were earlier reported to have survived the crash, but one later died in hospital.
Declaring a day of mourning, President Volodymyr Zelensky said he wanted an “objective and unbiased” investigation carried out immediately into the crash.
“We have lost young cadets and experienced military servicemen who had their whole life ahead of them,” he said. adding: “It is hard to choose the words to describe the pain of this loss.”
His office said he had ordered a halt to all flights in similar planes until the cause of the crash had been established.
Crash investigators are reportedly considering four possible causes – a technical malfunction of the aircraft, improper performance by either the flight crew or ground control, and poor maintenance.
Defence Minister Andriy Taran was quoted as saying “the plane likely caught the ground with its wing” and caught fire after that.
The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said in a statement that the crash happened five minutes after the flight commander requested to land because the left engine had failed.
“According to preliminary findings, the cadets did not directly control the plane – the crew captain carried out all flights,” the statement added.
There is no suggestion that the crash is linked to the conflict in eastern Ukraine. Chuhuiv is about 100km (60 miles) from the front line where government forces are fighting pro-Russian separatists.