Germanwings plane crash: Alps recovery operation resumes


Damaged flight voice recorder. 25 March 2015
The recovered cockpit voice recorder was badly damaged in the crash

A search and recovery operation has resumed in the southern French Alps after Tuesday's crash of a Germanwings plane that killed all 150 on board.
One of the "black box" recorders has been recovered from the site near Digne. Officials said it was damaged but was still expected to yield data.
The German, French and Spanish leaders have now arrived at the crash site.
The Airbus A320 - flight 4U 9525 - from Barcelona to Duesseldorf crashed after an eight-minute rapid descent.
Germanwings chief Thomas Winkelmann said 72 of the 144 passengers were German citizens and 35 were Spanish, although the list was being constantly updated. The German victims included 16 pupils returning from an exchange trip.
UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond confirmed that three Britons were on board. Other victims were from Australia, Argentina, Iran, Venezuela, the US, the Netherlands, Colombia, Mexico, Japan, Denmark and Israel.
The plane's cockpit voice recorder - recovered by a helicopter team on Tuesday - was damaged but could still provide information, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said.
Transport Minister Alain Vidalies said if voices had been recorded the investigation would proceed "fairly quickly".
Investigators are still searching for the second "black box" - the flight data recorder.

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