World

Germanwings crash: Victims' remains land in Duesseldorf

The faces of some of those on board the Airbus 320
 
The faces of some of those on board the Airbus 320

 

Lufthansa sent the coffins by cargo plane on Tuesday night from Marseille.
Elmar Giemulla, a lawyer for some of the families, said the arrival of the remains would give relatives 'closure'.
Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz is believed to have intentionally flown the Airbus A320 into the French Alps in March, killing 150 people.
Sixteen of the victims were from the Joseph-Koenig-Gymnasium school in Haltern and were returning from an exchange trip in Barcelona when the plane crashed.
Families will be allowed to visit the coffins inside a hangar in Duesseldorf on Wednesday.

Lufthansa sent the coffins by cargo plane on Tuesday night from Marseille.Elmar Giemulla, a lawyer for some of the families, said the arrival of the remains would give relatives 'closure'.

Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz is believed to have intentionally flown the Airbus A320 into the French Alps in March, killing 150 people.Sixteen of the victims were from the Joseph-Koenig-Gymnasium school in Haltern and were returning from an exchange trip in Barcelona when the plane crashed.

Families will be allowed to visit the coffins inside a hangar in Duesseldorf on Wednesday.

'The families are in denial. They cannot and do not want to realise that their children are dead,' Mr Giemulla told AFP.

'It will be brutal when they see the coffins tomorrow, but it is necessary, because they need closure.'

The remains of the rest of the victims will be sent back over the coming weeks. The passengers were from 18 countries, including Australia, Argentina and Japan, but most of those on board were either Spanish or German.

The repatriation of some of the bodies was delayed last week because of errors on the death certificates in France.