
On top of instability, conflict and poverty, South Sudan also lacks reliable transport infrastructure with frequent plane crashes attributed to overloading and bad weather.
The plane was a Cessna that departed Juba International Airport at 0715 GMT and crashed about 20 kilometres from the capital with no survivors, the South Sudanese Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement.
It said initial reports indicated the cause as "adverse weather conditions, particularly low visibility".
The victims included 12 South Sudanese and two Kenyan.
"All the bodies were charred beyond recognition," said a member of a UN rescue team sent to the scene, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Twenty people died in January 2025 in a plane crash in northern South Sudan.
In 2021, five people were killed when a cargo plane carrying fuel for the World Food Programme (WFP) crashed.
In 2015, the crash of a Soviet-era Antonov aircraft in Juba killed 36 people.
And in 2017, a plane that veered off a runway struck a fire truck before bursting into flames, but all 37 people on board miraculously escaped unharmed, reports BSS.