About 144 passengers
and six crew were today presumed dead after the Airbus A320 crashed in a remote
region of the French Alps en route from Spain to Germany.
Two babies and 16
German school children are believed to be among those killed.
Earlier reports quoted
aviation sources in France as saying the pilots issued a Mayday distress signal
and requested an emergency descent minutes before it hit the ground.
'It was air traffic
control that decided to declare the plane was in distress because there was no
contact with the crew of the plane,' a source told AFP.
Germanwings chief
executive Thomas Winkelmann said the aircraft began descending at 10.45am, just
a minute after reaching its cruising height of 38,000ft.
Germanwings said it was thought that 63
of the passengers on board were Germans, while reports from Spain suggest that
around 45 Spaniards may have been on the flight.
Debris from the jet,
operated by Lufthansa's Germanwings budget airline, has been found scattered
over a wide area near Barcelonnette in an inhospitable region of the Alps.
Witnesses have
described hearing an explosion 'like the sound of dynamite' then seeing fighter
jets fly past, suggesting the passenger plane had been under military
escort.
Grieving families have been gathering
at Dusseldorf airport in Germany, where the jet was due to land, to await news
of the rescue and recovery operation.
French president
Francois Hollande said he did not expect there to be any survivors.
He said: 'It's a
loss, a tragedy which has happened on our soil.
'I am seeking
information about homes in the area it came down. It's difficult place to
access. In the meantime solidarity must prevail.'
He said he believes
most of the passengers were German, Spanish and Turkish.
Photo credit: Dailymail
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GOD HAVE MERCY
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