A passenger plane carrying 150 people crashed in a remote part of the French Alps on Tuesday, officials said, warning that there are not expected to be any survivors.
French President Francois Hollande called the crash of the Airbus A320 a “tragedy” and said the wreckage was in a hard-to-reach area not far from the town of Barcelonette. The French interior ministry confirmed to NBC News that one of the black boxes from Germanwings Flight 9525 had been found as rescue teams converged on the crash site.
“We saw an aircraft that had literally been ripped apart,the bodies are in a state of destruction, there is not one intact piece of wing or fuselage,” Bruce Robin, prosecutor for the city of Marseille, told Reuters after flying over the crash zone in a helicopter.
French authorities suspended the search as night fell Tuesday. Lt. Col. Simon-Pierre Delannoy of the regional police rescue service said on BFM television that the conditions for the search had become too difficult.
The flight left Barcelona at 9:55 a.m. local time, or just before 5 a.m. ET, en route to Dusseldorf with 144 passengers and six crew members on board.
The airline — a budget carrier run by Lufthansa — said it did not yet have information on what caused the accident but that the 24-year-old Airbus had descended rapidly after reaching its cruising height and continued losing altitude for eight minutes.”The aircraft’s contact with French radar, French air traffic controllers, ended at 10:53 a.m. at an altitude of about 6,000 feet. The plane then crashed,” Germanwings’ Managing Director Thomas Winkelmann told a press conference. However, tracking sites including Flightradar24 showed a similar eight-minute descent but said last contact with the flight was at 10:40 local time (6:40 a.m. ET).
There were conflicting reports over whether the flight sent out a distress call. Weather conditions in the area of the crash were good at the time the plane went down, and Germanwings said the captain of the plane had logged more than 6,000 flight hours on the Airbus.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve immediately flew to the region, telling reporters once he landed that “exceptional measures” were put in place to assist in the rescue and investigation.
Ten helicopters and one military aircraft were being mobilized and bolstering the troops, national police and nearly 300 firemen on the scene, he said.
As rescue efforts were underway Tuesday, officials in the nearby town of Digne urged people not to approach the crash zone. The gymnasium in another nearby town, Seyne-les-Alpes, was being set up to take in bodies or survivors from the crash, the town confirmed to NBC News.
Germanwings confirmed that two babies were on board but was not immediately able to provide a breakdown of nationalities or passengers’ identities.
President Barack Obama said U.S. officials were working to confirm how many Americans were on board, telling a news conference that he had called Germany’s chancellor to express his condolences and offer assistance to the investigation.
Meanwhile, German officials confirmed that 16 students and two teachers from a high school in Haltern, 40 miles from Dusseldorf, were on the plane.
Two opera singers were on the plane. Contralto Maria Radner and bass baritone Oleg Bryjak had just performed in Siegfried at Barcleona’s Gran Teatre del Liceu, the opera house said in a statement.
Spain’s King Felipe — who was in Paris at the time of the crash — also said some of his countrymen were on the flight and that he was cutting short his trip to France.
Two passengers on the plane were Australian, the country’s foreign minister said. The woman and her adult son were from Victoria.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a statement that the “harrowing news” has put her nation in “deep mourning, calling the suffering of victims’ families “immeasurable.”








