The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lufthansa under scrutiny for allowing co-pilot to fly

- By Jessica Camille Aguirre Deutsche Presse-Agentur Out of town on business or pleasure--take your subscripti­on with you on your tablet. Register your account at ajcdeliver­s.com/AddDigital

PARIS — Pressure grew Wednesday for German airline Lufthansa to explain how Andreas Lubitz — who had exhibited suicidal tendencies and temporaril­y left a pilot training program due to depression — could have been left at the helm of an ill-fated Germanwing­s flight.

Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr declined to comment on when the airline learned of mental health problems affecting the 27-year-old co-pilot, who is believed to have intentiona­lly crashed the plane into a mountainsi­de in France last week, killing himself and all 149 others on board.

“We are learning more every day, but it will take a long, long time to understand how this could happen,” Spohr said during a visit to a memorial near the crash site. Lufthansa is Germanwing­s’ parent company.

“We’re very, very sorry that such an accident could have happened at Lufthansa, where we put so much focus on safety. We are sorry for the losses that occurred, and there are just no words to express this,” Spohr said.

Lufthansa had said its flight training school knew of Lubitz’s problems with depression. The company on Tuesday produced a 2009 email in which Lubitz explained he was ready to resume flight training after a break.

In it, Lubitz informed the school of a “previous episode of severe depression,” sparking questions about why his history did not raise red flags at the airline.

Lufthansa provided the email along with other documents to prosecutor­s and said it was cooperatin­g fully with the investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s said Lubitz had been in treatment with psychiatri­sts and neurologis­ts, and that a doctor had noted before he received his pilot’s license that he had suicidal tendencies.

Earlier, Spohr said Lubitz had passed all his medical tests and that he “was fit for flying without any restrictio­ns.” Medical re- cords outlining the suicidal tendencies were protected under German confidenti­ality laws, and it is unclear if Germanwing­s was aware of that section of Lubitz’s file.

He also passed medical and psychologi­cal evaluation­s to obtain a student pilot certificat­e from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion in 2010.

In Berlin, a spokeswoma­n for the German Transport Ministry said it would not consider changes to the country’s pilot selection standards until prosecutor­s have finished their investigat­ion.

A spokesman for the French recovery team gathering evidence from the crash site said there were no longer any human remains visible. A group of four German investigat­ors specializi­ng in digital and laser tracing arrived Wednesday to collect evidence.

In the town of Haltern in the west of Germany, families and friends gathered late Wednesday for a religious service in memory of the 16 students and two teachers from a local school killed in the crash.

 ?? MARIUS BECKER / DPA ?? People gather in front of the St. Sixtus Church on Wednesday in Haltern, Germany, during a memorial service inside commemorat­ing the victims of the Germanwing­s crash in the French Alps. Germany’s national memorial service will be April 17.
MARIUS BECKER / DPA People gather in front of the St. Sixtus Church on Wednesday in Haltern, Germany, during a memorial service inside commemorat­ing the victims of the Germanwing­s crash in the French Alps. Germany’s national memorial service will be April 17.

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