Air France to Compensate Families
Air France has said it will pay a first advance of $24,400 in compensation, through its insurers, to the families of the victims of the June 1 crash in which 228 people died, the company's chief executive has said. Brazilian and French ships are still searching the ocean for debris and bodies from Flight AF 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris which crashed into the Atlantic after flying into stormy weather.
Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, Air France's CEO, said: "The lawyers of our insurers in every country are talking to the victims' families to try and organise this advance payment." Investigators are still trying to establish the cause of the crash and Gourgeon stressed the payments were a compassionate gesture from the airline, not an admission of liability. Pierre-Jean Vandoorne, an ambassador appointed by the French government to liaise with the families of victims of the crash, told reporters the payments were "a first batch of aid".
Passengers from 32 nationalities died in the crash of the Airbus 330, among them 61 French people and 58 Brazilians. Vandoorne, who has just returned from a trip to Brazil to liaise with Brazilian authorities involved in the search operations and the autopsies, said 51 bodies had been recovered to date but none had been conclusively identified. "We will of course be informed immediately as soon as there are certainties but for now we have received no information concerning the identification of any of the bodies that have undergone autopsies," he said. Vandoorne said the government was informing the families of every new development via letters, email and telephone.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2...
Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, Air France's CEO, said: "The lawyers of our insurers in every country are talking to the victims' families to try and organise this advance payment." Investigators are still trying to establish the cause of the crash and Gourgeon stressed the payments were a compassionate gesture from the airline, not an admission of liability. Pierre-Jean Vandoorne, an ambassador appointed by the French government to liaise with the families of victims of the crash, told reporters the payments were "a first batch of aid".
Passengers from 32 nationalities died in the crash of the Airbus 330, among them 61 French people and 58 Brazilians. Vandoorne, who has just returned from a trip to Brazil to liaise with Brazilian authorities involved in the search operations and the autopsies, said 51 bodies had been recovered to date but none had been conclusively identified. "We will of course be informed immediately as soon as there are certainties but for now we have received no information concerning the identification of any of the bodies that have undergone autopsies," he said. Vandoorne said the government was informing the families of every new development via letters, email and telephone.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2...

CNN Breaking News
-- Air France 447 did not break up in flight, but "went straight down, almost vertically," investigators say.