Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Suicide Crash: Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Wilfully Crashed Jetliner, Says French Prosecutor

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Mar, 2015 10:36 AM
    In a shocking revelation, the French prosecutor said on Thursday that the co-pilot of the Germanwings A320 flight deliberately crashed the airliner, killing all 144 passengers and six crew members on board.
     
    The action of the first officer, Andreas G. Lubitz, of the crashed Germanwings A320 in the French Alps "can be analysed as his intention to destroy the aircraft", said Brice Robin at a press conference on Thursday in Marseille. 
     
    The prosecutor told media that they had come to this conclusion after listening to the cockpit voice recorder recovered from the crash site, the Spanish news agency EFE said.
     
    Robin said the 28-year-old co-pilot appears to have deliberately refused to open the door for the captain who had left the cockpit briefly after flight 4U 9525 took off from Barcelona in Spain headed for Dusseldorf in Germany.
     
    He said that for the first 20 minutes of the flight, there was "normal conversation" between the two pilots till the captain decided to leave the cockpit. 
     
    The moving of the seat and shutting of the door could be heard on the cockpit voice recorder. Later, they could make out a banging on the door, with the captain asking the co-pilot to open the door. This could be heard on the speaker phone that the captain used.
     
    The co-pilot was alive till the last moment, as his breathing could be heard, but he apparently chose not to speak up or respond to the captain, the prosecutor said, adding that no words were spoken in the last 10 minutes before the plane crashed around 11 a.m. local time on Tuesday in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence in the southern French Alps. 
     
    He said the plane started its descent even as the captain was asking to be allowed in. 
     
    "This could only be from a deliberate act" on the part of the co-pilot, the prosecutor said.
     
     
    According to Robin, there was no indication that the co-pilot was a terrorist.
     
    According to a Xinhua report from Berlin, Germanwings and its parent company said in a joint statement that they have been “shaken” by the French prosector's report. 
     
    "We are shaken by the upsetting statements of the French authorities," said Germanwings and Lufthansa in a statement on Twitter.
     
    "Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with the families and friends of the victims," said the statement.
     
    In Cologne, Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr said that his company and Germanwing were "stunned" by the French prosecutor's statements.
     
    Addressing the media, Spohr said what had happened in the plane was "not conceivable".
     
    He stressed at the same time that all Lufthansa pilots, including the two pilots on board the crashed plane, had been "carefully selected", adding that they are trained and passed tests to become pilots. 
     
    According to Spohr, the co-pilot had passed all the flight and medical tests and was 100 percent fit to fly.
     
    He said Lubitz started his training in an aviation school in Bremen, Germany, in 2008, but the process got interrupted. Spohr did not mention the reason for this.
     
     
    The training then resumed, the chief executive said, and Lubitz started to work as a co-pilot for Germanwings since 2013.
     
    According to Spohr, a pilot candidate for Lufthansa and Germanwings must receive a fitness test after training interruption for whatever reasons and can only continue if the fitness was established.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    VANCOUVER — The RCMP officer who stunned Robert Dziekanski with a Taser at Vancouver's airport lied at a public inquiry, a judge ruled Friday, marking the first guilty verdict of any kind related to the Polish immigrant's death.

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    Orlando SeaWorld posted a statement on its Facebook page Friday confirming the death of Nanuq, a male beluga estimated to be around 31 or 32 years old.

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union
    VANCOUVER — The union representing British Columbia teachers says the profession's regulatory branch has bungled an election by mailing out voting packages without ballots.

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg mom has been found not guilty of child abandonment after leaving her six-year-old son home alone for 90 minutes.

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Kamloops man who is seeking the return of 10 medicinal marijuana plants seized by police last summer will have to wait another month to find out if he will be reunited with his buds.

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death
    TORONTO — An expert in childproofing says the freezing death of a Toronto boy highlights the unpredictability of children and the need for caregivers  to be prepared for different developmental milestones. 

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death