A Germanwings
plane carrying 150 people has crashed in the French Alps on its way from
Barcelona to Duesseldorf, the British Broadcasting Corporation reports.
The Airbus A320 –
flight 4U 9525 – went down between Digne and Barcelonnette.
None of the 144
passengers or six crew, is expected to have survived.
The plane crashed
after an eight-minute descent, an official said.
It is not clear if
it sent a distress signal.
The dead are
believed to include 16 German schoolchildren. French and German leaders have
expressed shock.
“This is the hour
in which we all feel deep sorrow,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel told
reporters, adding that she was planning to travel to the crash site.
A rescue
helicopter has reportedly reached the site of the crash, in a remote mountain
area.
Gilbert Sauvan, a
local council official, told Les Echos newspaper that the plane had
“disintegrated”.
“The largest
debris is the size of a car,” he said.
The passengers
included a German school class on its way back from an exchange trip.
Sandrine Boisse, a
tourism official from the ski resort of Pra Loup, told the BBC that
she had heard a strange noise in the mountains at around 11.00 (10.00 GMT).
“At first we
thought it was on the ski slopes, an avalanche, but it wasn’t the same noise,”
she said. “I think it was the noise of when a plane goes very quickly down.”
The plane began
descending one minute after reaching its cruising height and continued to lose
altitude for eight minutes, Germanwings managing director Thomas Winkelmann
told reporters.
He said the
aircraft lost contact with French air traffic controllers at 10:53 at an
altitude of about 6,000 feet.
150 feared killed after Germanwings airliner crashes
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
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