The Guardian Australia

Final minutes of Air France flight AF447 to be examined as trial opens

- Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

The harrowing final minutes of the Air France flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris that went into freefall and plunged into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009, killing all 228 people on board, will be examined as a landmark trial opens in Paris on Monday.

Two aviation industry heavyweigh­ts – the airline Air France, and the aircraft maker Airbus – are being tried on charges of involuntar­y manslaught­er for what was the worst plane crash in the French airline’s history.

It is the first time French companies have been directly placed on trial after an air crash, rather than individual­s, and families’ lawyers battled for years to bring the case to court.

The crash on 1 June 2009 shook the world of air travel when flight AF447 disappeare­d from radars as it crossed the night sky during a storm over the Atlantic between Brazil and Senegal. The Airbus A330 had vanished without a mayday sign.

Days later, debris was found in the ocean, but it took nearly two years to locate the bulk of the fuselage and recover the “black box” flight recorders. The unpreceden­ted French search effort involved combing 17,000 sq km of ocean bed at depths of up to 4,000 metres for over 22 months.

The plane had been carrying 12 crew members and 216 passengers from 33 different nationalit­ies, all of whom were killed.

Planes most often crash on land and the AF447 ocean crash came to be seen as one of a handful of accidents that changed aviation. It led to changes in safety regulation­s, pilot training and the use of airspeed sensors.

The trial will hear extensive detail from the final, fatal minutes in the cockpit as the confused captain and copilots fought to control the plane.

As the plane approached the equator on its way to Paris, it had entered a so-called “intertropi­cal convergenc­e zone” that often produces volatile storms with heavy precipitat­ion. As a storm buffeted the plane, ice crystals present at high altitudes had disabled the plane’s airspeed sensors, blocking speed and altitude informatio­n. The automatic pilot functions stopped working.

The 205-tonne jet went into an aerodynami­c stall and then plunged.

“We’ve lost our speeds,” one co-pilot is heard saying in the flight recordings, before other indicators mistakenly show a loss of altitude, and a series of alarm messages appear on the cockpit screens. “I don’t know what’s happening,” one of the pilots says.

The historic trial will consider the role of the airspeed sensors and the pilots.

Daniele Lamy, president of the victims’ group, Entraide et Solidarité, told AFP: “We expect an impartial and exemplary trial so that this never happens again, and that as a result the two defendants will make safety their priority instead of only profitabil­ity.”

Air France and Airbus face potential fines of up to €225,000 – a fraction of their annual revenues – but they could suffer damage to their reputation­s if found criminally responsibl­e.

Both companies have denied any criminal negligence, and investigat­ing magistrate­s overseeing the case dropped the charges in 2019, attributin­g the crash mainly to pilot error.

That decision infuriated victims’ families, and in 2021 a Paris appeals court ruled there was sufficient evidence to allow a trial to go ahead.

“Air France … will continue to demonstrat­e that it did not commit any criminal negligence that caused this accident, and will request an acquittal,” the airline said in a statement to AFP.

Airbus, maker of the A330 jet that had been put into service just four years before the accident, did not comment before the trial but has also denied any criminal negligence.

 ?? Photograph: BRAZILIAN NAVY/AFP/Getty Images ?? Divers recover part of the tail section from the Air France A330.
Photograph: BRAZILIAN NAVY/AFP/Getty Images Divers recover part of the tail section from the Air France A330.

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