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Germanwings flight with at least 144 passengers and crew of six goes down in the Alps region, French sources say.
An Airbus plane operated by Germanwings with at least 144 passengers, two pilots and four flight attendants on board has crashed in the French Alps region.
In a live briefing on Tuesday, French President Francois Hollande said it was unlikely that there were survivors, adding that the area of the crash was remote.
Hollande said it was probable that a number of the victims were German. It was not clear whether anyone on the ground had been hurt, he said.
"It's a tragedy on our soil," Hollande said about the crash that ocurred near Digne-Les-Bains in Alpes-de-Hautes-Provence.
Hollande "extended all his support" to German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a phone call, the French presidency said in a statement, while the German ambassador to France said she would visit the crash site in the southern Alps within hours.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in a statement that at least 45 Spanish passengers were believed to be onboard the plane.
'A loud noise, then nothing'
The owner of a nearby camping site said he heard the plane come down. "There was a loud noise and then suddenly nothing. At first I thought it came from fighter jets that often hold drills in the area," Pierre Polizzi told Al Jazeera.
"The plane crashed just 2km from here, high on a mountain," Polizzi, owner of Camping Rioclar, said.
Eric Ciotti, the head of the regional council, said search-and-rescue teams were headed to the crash site at Meolans-Revels.
French TV reported that 240 local firefighters and three police squadrons were mobilised for the rescue effort.
Story: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/03/german-passenger-jet-crashes-french-alps-150324104354907.html
An Airbus plane operated by Germanwings with at least 144 passengers, two pilots and four flight attendants on board has crashed in the French Alps region.
In a live briefing on Tuesday, French President Francois Hollande said it was unlikely that there were survivors, adding that the area of the crash was remote.
Hollande said it was probable that a number of the victims were German. It was not clear whether anyone on the ground had been hurt, he said.
"It's a tragedy on our soil," Hollande said about the crash that ocurred near Digne-Les-Bains in Alpes-de-Hautes-Provence.
Hollande "extended all his support" to German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a phone call, the French presidency said in a statement, while the German ambassador to France said she would visit the crash site in the southern Alps within hours.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in a statement that at least 45 Spanish passengers were believed to be onboard the plane.
'A loud noise, then nothing'
The owner of a nearby camping site said he heard the plane come down. "There was a loud noise and then suddenly nothing. At first I thought it came from fighter jets that often hold drills in the area," Pierre Polizzi told Al Jazeera.
"The plane crashed just 2km from here, high on a mountain," Polizzi, owner of Camping Rioclar, said.
Eric Ciotti, the head of the regional council, said search-and-rescue teams were headed to the crash site at Meolans-Revels.
French TV reported that 240 local firefighters and three police squadrons were mobilised for the rescue effort.
Story: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/03/german-passenger-jet-crashes-french-alps-150324104354907.html