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Black boxes decoded, cause still unclear
Experts have decoded the contents of the recorders, known as "black box", of a crashed passenger aircraft, but the cause of the accident is still unclear, said Xu Li, spokesman for a State Council investigation team, Saturday.
A Canadian-made Bombardier CRJ200 crashed into a park lake in the suburb of Baotou in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, one minute after it took off towards the east China metropolis Shanghai, killing 53 people aboard and two on the ground. So far, more than 90 percent of the remains of the plane have been recovered and most parts of it have been badly damaged, according to the experts. Victims' bodies claimed The official said all 55 bodies have been claimed by their family members. The corpuses were identified by DNA testing. The investigation team will try to fulfill the requirements raised by family on beautification of the remains before cremation. Body cremated It's the first body of victims being cremated, said an official with the funeral home. Chen was an employee of the Shanghai Fudan Fuhua Scientific and Technological Shareholding Company. Before the cremation, people paid their last respects to the remains of the deceased. Bodies of other victims will be cremated subsequently after body recognition by their relatives. The 50-seat branch-line jet CRJ-200, with 47 passengers and six crew members
aboard crashed into a giant lake of Nanhai Park in Baotou on November 21,
killing all people on board and another two persons on
ground. |
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