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Crashed Air Algérie flight voice recorder 'unreadable'

French inspectors said recovered cockpit recordings were 'so far unusable' to explain crash over Mali in which 116 died, 54 of them French.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Voice recordings taken from the cockpit of Air Algérie flight AH5017, which crashed in Mali killing 116 people last month, are “unusable”, French investigators attempting to determine the cause of the crash said Thursday, reports FRANCE 24.

"The tape was a little bit damaged,” Rémi Jouty, the head of France's BEA air safety agency, told journalists.

“The BEA laboratory was able to restore the tape. Unfortunately the recordings are so far unusable.”

Flight AH5017, a McDonnell Douglas 83 jet that had taken off on July 24 from Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso bound for Algiers, crashed in the Mali desert after asking to turn back as bad weather struck.

France bore the brunt of the tragedy, with nearly half of the victims. Other passengers came from Burkina Faso, Lebanon, Algeria, Spain, Canada, Germany and Luxembourg.

Jouty said some of the plane’s recording devices allowed investigators to trace its fast descent through stormy weather, but the probe had not yet excluded other possible causes, including error or deliberate action.

It seemed likely that the plane had broken up on impact instead of in the air, he said.

"When we look at the trajectory, this leads us to believe that the plane did not break up into several pieces while in flight. This does not exclude that damage was caused during the flight,” he told the press conference in Le Bourget, near Paris.

"I don't think we can at this point exclude the possibility of a deliberate act but we cannot say more for the moment.”

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.