July 2, 2009 Thursday
Updated

July 2, 2009
AIR FRANCE CRASH
Airline CEO meets families
The airline's chief executive Pierre-Henri Gourgeon (left) attended mass at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Rio's Botafogo neighborhood. -- PHOTO: AFP

RIO DE JANEIRO - THE head of Air France-KLM met on Wednesday with the families of victims of Flight AF 447, one month after the jet plunged into the Atlantic, killing all 228 people onboard.

The airline's chief executive Pierre-Henri Gourgeon attended mass at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Rio's Botafogo neighborhood, and met for an hour and a half with some 70 families, most of them Brazilian.

He was also set to thank the Brazilian authorities for their help in a 26-day search operation that recovered 51 bodies and over 600 pieces from the doomed aircraft.

People from 32 different countries - including 72 French citizens and 59 Brazilians - were aboard the Airbus A330 that came down on the night of May 31 to June 1, in the worst crash in Air France's 75-year history.

'We shared with them what we know, which is limited, and especially wanted to answer their questions' on the recovered bodies, Mr Gourgeon told AFP of his meeting with the families.

'The identification process is moving smoothly and a total of 30 victims have now been identified.' Among those whose identities have been confirmed were Brazilian, French, British and German nationals.

Families were also concerned with compensation measures, Gourgeon said, adding that emergency funds of $17,500 euros (S$35,785) had been provided to each family.

After each case is examined, the insurance provider was then set to propose further compensation that families can accept, reject or negotiate.

The first report by the French air accident agency BEA is due out Thursday and will provide 'a list of all the facts that have been established on the plane, the crew, the trajectory, contacts with staff on the ground, recovered debris and weather forecasts,' Gourgeon said.

Although the report will represent 'a significant step,' it 'does not answer the question about exactly what happened, or the sequence of events that led to the accident,' added the Air France chief, noting that it was 'essential' to recover the downed craft's black boxes. -- AFP

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