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Families of Germanwings crash victims arrive in France

Families of victims from the Germanwings plane that crashed into the French Alps arrived in France on Thursday, an interior ministry spokesman said. "Two planes from Duesseldorf and Barcelona, with families and friends of victims on board, have just landed," the official, Pierre-Henry Brandet, said.

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Relatives of the victims of the Germanwings plane crash arrive at the airport in Duesseldorf, Germany.
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Families of victims from the Germanwings plane that crashed into the French Alps arrived in France on Thursday, an interior ministry spokesman said. "Two planes from Duesseldorf and Barcelona, with families and friends of victims on board, have just landed," the official, Pierre-Henry Brandet, said.

They were due to meet prosecutor Brice Robin, who is leading the investigation, before taking a bus to the area of the crash in the Alps. A plane chartered by Lufthansa left Barcelona about 10:00 am (local time) for Marseille carrying some 60 relatives on board, a source in the Spanish crisis committee for the disaster said.

All 150 people on board the Airbus 320 operated by Germanwings, Lufthansa's low-cost subsidiary, died when it crashed on Tuesday en route from Barcelona to Duesseldorf in Germany. At least 72 Germans and 51 Spaniards were among those on board, according to various tolls given by Spanish authorities and the airline.

Escorted by police, the families made no comment to reporters as they boarded buses at a nearby hotel for Barcelona's El Prat airport early Thursday morning. They were accompanied by Red Cross workers, and were accompanied by psychological counsellors on the flight.

A handful of other relatives left Barcelona for France on Tuesday by coach because they did not want to fly, an official said. The spot where the plane crashed is hard to access and closed off while rescuers search the debris, but reception centres have been set up nearby.

French police on Thursday pushed news media back away from an area in the Alpine village of Le Vernet ahead of the arrival of families of the 150 people who died in the Germanwings crash. "The families don't want any images of them as they pay their respects. We ask you to respect their privacy," one police officer who declined to be identified said as he ordered journalists away. 

Also Read: Germanwings: What exactly happened in the flight?

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