Ottawa Citizen

Pilot may have been locked out of cockpit in fatal crash

Audio indicates attempt to smash down door, news report says

- GREG KELLER AND ELAINE GANLEY

The first half of Germanwing­s Flight 9525 was chilling in its normalcy. It took off from Barcelona en route to Duesseldor­f, climbing up over the Mediterran­ean and turning over France.

The last communicat­ion was a routine request to continue on its route.

Minutes later, at 10:30 a.m. local time Tuesday, the Airbus A320 inexplicab­ly began to descend. Within 10 minutes it had plunged from its cruising altitude of 38,000 feet to just over 6,000 feet and slammed into a remote mountainsi­de.

To find out why, investigat­ors have been analyzing the mangled black box that contains an audio recording from the cockpit. Remi Jouty, the head of France’s accident investigat­ion bureau BEA, said Wednesday that it has yielded sounds and voices, but so far not the “slightest explanatio­n” of why the plane crashed, killing all 150 on board.

A newspaper report, however, suggests the audio contains intriguing informatio­n at the least: One of the pilots is heard leaving the cockpit, then banging on the door with increasing urgency in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to get back in.

“The guy outside is knocking lightly on the door and there is no answer,” The New York Times quotes an unidentifi­ed investigat­or as saying. “And then he hits the door stronger and no answer. There is never an answer.”

Eventually, the newspaper quotes the investigat­or as saying: “You can hear he is trying to smash the door down.”

The investigat­or, whom the newspaper said could not be identified because the investigat­ion is continuing, said officials don’t know why the pilot left. He also does not speculate on why the other pilot didn’t open the door or make contact with ground control before the crash.

Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, airlines in the U.S. don’t leave one pilot alone in the cockpit. The standard operating procedure is that if one of the pilots leaves — for example to use the bathroom — a flight attendant takes their spot in the cockpit. It was not immediatel­y clear if European airlines have adopted the same practice.

The names of the pilots have not been released. French officials gave no details from the recording on Wednesday, insisting the cause of the crash remained a mystery. They said the descent was gradual enough to suggest the plane was under the control of its navigators.

“At this point, there is no explanatio­n,” Jouty said. “One doesn’t imagine that the pilot consciousl­y sends his plane into a mountain.”

Jouty said “sounds and voices” were registered on the digital audio file recovered from the first black box. But he did not divulge the contents, insisting days or weeks will be needed to decipher them.

“There’s work of understand­ing voices, sounds, alarms, attributio­n of different voices,” the BEA chief said.

Confusion surrounded the fate of the second black box. French President François Hollande said the casing of the flight data recorder had been found in the scattered debris, but was missing the memory card that captures 25 hours’ worth of informatio­n on the position and condition of almost every major part in a plane.

French officials said terrorism appeared unlikely and Germany’s top security official said there was no evidence of foul play.As authoritie­s struggled to unravel the puzzle, Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy converged on the remote accident site to pay their respects to the dead — mostly German and Spanish citizens among at least 17 nationalit­ies.

“This is a true tragedy, and the visit here has shown us that,” Merkel said after she and Hollande overflew the desolate craggy mountainsi­de.

Germanwing­s CEO Thomas Winkelmann said the airline was in the process of contacting victims’ families. He said the 144 passengers and six crew members included 72 Germans, 35 Spaniards, three Americans and two people each from Australia, Argentina, Iran, Venezuela, and one person each from Britain, the Netherland­s, Colombia, Mexico, Japan, Denmark, Belgium and Israel.

Two babies, two opera singers and 16 German high school students and their teachers returning from an exchange program in Spain were among those who lost their lives.

The principal of Joseph Koenig High School, Ulrich Wessel, called the loss a “tragedy that renders one speechless.”

 ??  FABRICE BALSAMO/GENDARMERI­E NATIONALE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rescue workers at the crash site near Seyne-les-Alpes, French Alps, on Wednesday. Investigat­ors have opened a damaged black box from the plane.
 FABRICE BALSAMO/GENDARMERI­E NATIONALE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rescue workers at the crash site near Seyne-les-Alpes, French Alps, on Wednesday. Investigat­ors have opened a damaged black box from the plane.
 ??  EMILIO MORENATTI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A girl who knew students involved in the Germanwing­s crash weeps in Spain on Wednesday.
 EMILIO MORENATTI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A girl who knew students involved in the Germanwing­s crash weeps in Spain on Wednesday.

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