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A man holds a sign that says: 'French justice, 13 years too late.' PA

Airbus and Air France manslaughter trial underway over 2009 Rio-Paris crash

The worst plane crash in Air France history killed 228 people of 33 nationalities, including three Irish women.

THE TRIAL IS underway of Airbus and Air France on trial on manslaughter charges over the crash of a Rio de Janeiro to Paris flight in 2009 which plunged into the Atlantic amid thunderstorms, killing all 228 people on board.

The worst plane crash in Air France history killed people of 33 nationalities, including three Irish women: Jane Deasy, Eithne Walls and Aisling Butler.

All three were doctors who were returning home from a holiday together.

The victims’ families have fought for more than a decade to see the case come to trial.

Airbus chief executive Guillaume Faury and Air France head Anne Rigail were among those at the courthouse on Monday. Both companies deny criminal wrongdoing, though Air France has already compensated the families of those killed.

If convicted, each company faces potential fines of up to €225,000, a fraction of their annual revenues. No-one risks prison as only the companies are on trial.

Nevertheless, the families see the trial itself as important after their long quest for justice, and aviation industry experts see it as significant for learning lessons that could prevent future crashes.
france-brazil-plane-crash File photo of workers unloading debris from the crashed Air France flight AF447 AP / PA Images AP / PA Images / PA Images
German Bernd Gans, who lost his daughter Ines in the crash, said: “It’s very important that we made it to the trial stage … Thirteen years of waiting, it is almost inhuman.”

Another man went to the trial carrying a cardboard sign reading: “French justice. 13 Years Too Late.”

The investigation found that multiple factors contributed to the crash of Flight 447. The trial is expected to focus on pilot error, and the icing over of external sensors called pitot tubes.

An Associated Press investigation at the time found that Airbus had known since at least 2002 about problems with the type of pitots used on the jet that crashed, but failed to replace them until after the incident.

The A330-200 plane disappeared from radar over the Atlantic Ocean between Brazil and Senegal with 216 passengers and 12 crew members on board.

As a storm buffeted the plane, ice disabled the pitot tubes, blocking speed and altitude information. The autopilot disconnected. The crew resumed manual piloting, but with erroneous navigation data. The plane went into an aerodynamic stall, its nose pitched upwards and then it plunged into the sea.

It took two years to find the plane and its black box recorders on the ocean floor, at depths of more than 13,000ft (around 4,000m).

Air France is accused of not having implemented training in the event of icing of the pitot probes despite the risks. It has since changed its training manuals and simulations.

The company said it will demonstrate in court “that it has not committed a criminal fault at the origin of the accident” and plead for acquittal.

Airbus is accused of having known that the model of pitot tubes on Flight 447 was faulty, and not doing enough to urgently inform airlines and their crews about it and to ensure training to mitigate the resulting risk. The model in question – a Thales AA pitot – was subsequently banned and replaced.

Airbus blames pilot error, and told investigators that icing over is a problem inherent to all such sensors.

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