The Borneo Post

Rescuers search for air crash bodies in French Alps

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SEYNE, France: French rescuers resumed the search yesterday for the remains of the 150 people, including 16 school children, killed when a Germanwing­s Airbus slammed into the side of a nearly inaccessib­le mountain in the Alps.

Helicopter­s took off from a nearby improvised base, heading for the rugged area where flight 4U9525 crashed Tuesday, spreading debris and body parts of the mostly German and Spanish victims over a wide area.

Officials are hunting for clues to why the plane, operated by German flag carrier Lufthansa’s budget subsidiary, entered a fatal eight-minute descent on its route between Barcelona and Duesseldor­f.

No distress signal was sent and the crew failed to respond to desperate attempts at contact from ground control.

The cockpit voice recorder recovered from the wreckage has been found damaged and has been taken to Paris for analysis, a source close to the inquiry said Wednesday.

“The black box that was found is the CVR,” the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The cockpit voice recorder ( CVR) “was damaged. It has been transferre­d to Paris this morning.”

A second so-called black box, in this case recording flight data, has yet to be found.

Video images from a government helicopter Tuesday showed a desolate snow-flecked moonscape, with steep ravines covered in scree. Debris was strewn across the mountainsi­de, pieces of twisted metal smashed into tiny bits.

Debris was believed to be scattered over four acres of remote and inaccessib­le mountainou­s terrain, hampering rescue efforts.

The plane was ‘totally destroyed’, a local member of parliament who flew over the site said, describing the scene as “horrendous”.

“The biggest body parts we identified are not bigger than a briefcase,” one investigat­or said.

More than 300 policemen and 380 firefighte­rs have been mobilised for the grisly task of searching the site.

Lieutenant Colonel Jean-Marc Menichini said a squad of 30 mountain rescue police would resume attempts to reach the crash site by helicopter at dawn Wednesday, while a further 65 police were seeking access on foot.

Five investigat­ors had spent the night camped at the site.

It would take “at least a week” to search the remote site, he said.

“Ground access is horrible.... It’s a very high mountainou­s area, very steep and it’s terrible to get there except from the air during winter,” local resident Francoise Pie said.

Family members of the dead were to arrive Wednesday at the rescuers’ logistics base in a village near the crash site.

French President Francois Hollande, his German counterpar­t Angela Merkel and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy were also expected to arrive in the area around 2: 00 pm (1300 GMT).

The dead included six crew and 144 passengers, a majority of them German and Spanish. They included 16 German teenagers returning home from a school trip.

Their high school in the small German town of Haltern was to hold a memorial event Wednesday to honour the victims.

“This is certainly the darkest day in the history of our city,” said a tearful Bodo Klimpel, the town’s mayor.

“It is the worst thing you can imagine.”

Spain, meanwhile, declared three days of mourning and was to hold a minute of silence across the country at noon Wednesday. Spanish King Felipe VI cut short his first state visit to France on Tuesday minutes after it began when he heard news of the tragedy. — AFP

Ground access is horrible.... It’s a very high mountainou­s area, very steep and it’s terrible to get there except from the air during winter.

Francoise Pie, local resident

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 ??  ?? French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve (centre) is sheltered from the rain upon his arrival in Seyne, south-eastern France, near the site where a Germanwing­s Airbus A320 crashed in the French Alps. — AFP photo
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve (centre) is sheltered from the rain upon his arrival in Seyne, south-eastern France, near the site where a Germanwing­s Airbus A320 crashed in the French Alps. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A screen grab taken from an AFP TV video shows debris of the Germanwing­s Airbus A320 at the crash site in the French Alps above the southeaste­rn town of Seyne. — AFP photo
A screen grab taken from an AFP TV video shows debris of the Germanwing­s Airbus A320 at the crash site in the French Alps above the southeaste­rn town of Seyne. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A helicopter of civil security services is seen in Seyne, south-eastern France, near the site where a Germanwing­s Airbus A320 crashed in the French Alps. — AFP photo
A helicopter of civil security services is seen in Seyne, south-eastern France, near the site where a Germanwing­s Airbus A320 crashed in the French Alps. — AFP photo
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