WORLD> Europe
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Air France flight pieces still missing
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-06 09:51 PARIS: France's transportation minister said on Friday that French forces have found no signs of the Airbus A330 airplane that vanished over the Atlantic and urged "extreme prudence" about suspected debris taken from the ocean.
The Brazilian air force announced on Thursday afternoon that a helicopter plucked an airplane cargo pallet from the sea, but then said six hours later that it was not from the Airbus and was just sea trash. "French authorities have been saying for several days that we have to be extremely prudent," Bussereau told France's RTL radio. "Our planes and naval ships have seen nothing." Bussereau said the search must continue and stressed that the priority was finding the flight recorders. The plane went down on Sunday night with 228 people on board in the world's worst aviation disaster since 2001.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, speaking on Thursday in Rio de Janeiro where he attended a mass honoring the crash victims, said experts had not found signs that would back up a "terrorism theory". "But we cannot discard that for now," he told reporters. "Nothing leads us to believe that there was an explosion, but that doesn't mean there wasn't one." "All the paths are open and we will not give priority to a single premise because that would be immoral," he added. Investigators are looking into whether malfunctions in instruments used to determine airspeed may have led the plane to be traveling at the wrong speed when it encountered turbulence from towering thunderstorms over the Atlantic Ocean. Airbus issues advisory European planemaker Airbus has sent an advisory to all operators of the A330 reminding them of how to handle the plane in conditions similar to those experienced by Flight 447, which was an Airbus A330-200 version. Airbus spokesman Justin Dubon said the planemaker sent a reminder of A330 operating procedures to airlines late on Thursday after the French agency investigating the crash said the doomed flight had faced turbulent weather and inconsistency in the speed readings by different instruments. That meant "the air speed of the aircraft was unclear," Dubon said. Meteorologists said the Air France jet entered an unusual storm with 160 kmph updrafts that acted as a vacuum, sucking water up from the ocean. The moist air rushed up to the plane's high altitude, where it quickly froze in minus-40 degree temperatures. The updrafts also would have created dangerous turbulence. AP |