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Germany to hold national memorial for crash victims

Germany will hold a national memorial ceremony and service for victims of a Germanwings flight that crashed in the French Alps, killing all 150 aboard, on April 17, regional authorities said today.

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Germany will hold a national memorial ceremony and service for victims of a Germanwings flight that crashed in the French Alps, killing all 150 aboard, on April 17, regional authorities said today.

The ceremony will be held at Cologne Cathedral in western Germany, a region from where many of the victims originated, and is due to be attended by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck, a spokeswoman for the regional North Rhine-Westphalia government said. 

Families and friends of the victims, as well as representatives from other countries affected by Tuesday's air disaster are invited, she said, adding they also wanted to enable anyone wishing to express their condolences to take part.

Gauck attended a memorial service yesterday for 16 pupils and two teachers from a school in the western town of Haltern, who had been flying back from an exchange trip in Spain.Half of the 150 people on the ill-fated flight from Barcelona to Duesseldorf were German, with Spain accounting for at least 50 and the remainder composed of more than a dozen other nationalities. French prosecutors believe that co-pilot Andreas Lubitz locked his captain out of the cockpit and deliberately flew Flight 4U 9525 into a mountainside. 

Also Read: Germanwings crash: What really happened in the flight's last moments?

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