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[Dunia]
Lagi Pesawat Terhempas AirBus German
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Edited by awanearisu at 25-3-2015 09:17 AM
Video dari BBC dan CNN
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ngeri sgt uols
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nice words to say
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Kerap plak sejak akhir-akhir ni kapal terbang terhempas/accident. |
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takziah... ini menyedihkan
tapi aku tetap akan terbang...
ajal maut ditangan Allah |
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takziah pada mereka |
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Edited by manehnya at 25-3-2015 10:57 AM
apa ke punca nya...?
- <iframe frameborder="0" width="640" height="359" src="https://api.dmcloud.net/player/embed/4e7343f894a6f677b10006b4/551195e694a6f646fbedfbd8/45f3839123af456e8ee8665e1fca0c72?exported=1&force_asset_name=mp4_h264_aac"></iframe>
Copy the Code
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seramnya tengok serpihan kecil. macam kena blender je pesawat tu |
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kuat gile impact nya bila terhempas gaknya.. terhempas dalam keadaan aircraft tengah bergerak laju |
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One of 'black boxes' found
One of the plane's "black boxes" has been recovered, the French interior minister said. The data recorder will be the most useful in determining the cause of the crash. Its contents are still unknown, but it is a good sign that it was found just hours after the crash.
France's aviation accident investigation bureau will examine the device immediately, the interior minister said. |
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Germanwings crash: Who was on the plane?
(CNN)Opera singers, a group of exchange students and an architect were among the 150 people aboard the Germanwings plane that crashed in the French Alps on Tuesday.
Leaders in France and Spain have said they don't believe there are any survivors.
Details are still emerging about the 144 passengers and six crew members on the Airbus A320, which was flying from Barcelona, Spain, to Dusseldorf, Germany, when it crashed.
Spain's King Felipe VI said "high numbers of Spaniards, Germans and Turks" were on the aircraft. British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said it's likely British nationals were on the plane, but officials have yet to confirm how many were aboard.
Weeping relatives arrived throughout the day at Barcelona's airport, where a terminal was blocked off for them. Medics and psychologists were in private space to assist families.
Here's what we know about the victims and their nationalities so far:
Germany
There were at least 67 Germans onboard, Germanwings CEO Thomas Winkelmann said. But he cautioned that figure could change as new information comes to light.
Sixteen students and two teachers from Haltern, Germany, were on the plane, Winkelmann said.
"The whole city is shocked and we can feel it everywhere," Haltern Mayor Bodo Klimpel said at a news conference. "This is the worst, what happened ... what you can imagine."
The German students were returning home after spending a week at the Giola Institute, in the town of Llinars del Valles, near Barcelona, Spain's El Pais newspaper reported.
Some of their relatives heard about the crash on the news. Some parents went to the airport while others rushed to the school, Joseph Koenig Gymnasium, Klimpel said.
The Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona posted a statement on its Facebook page saying that two German opera singers who performed there this month in a production of "Siegfried," Oleg Bryjak and Maria Radner, had perished in the crash.
Radner was returning to Germany with her husband and child, a spokesman for the production company said.
Bryjak, a bass baritone, had performed in the Deutsche Oper am Rhein ensemble since 1996, the Dusseldorf opera house said on Twitter.
Japan
Two Japanese nationals were booked for the flight, Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
Satoshi Nagata and Junichi Sato were scheduled to fly, but the ministry was still trying to confirm whether both men were actually on board the flight.
Nagata and Sato are residents of Dusseldorf, Germany.
Colombia
Two Colombian nationals, María del Pilar Tejada and Luis Eduardo Medrano, lost their lives on the flight, Colombia's Foreign Ministry said.
Medrano, 36, was an architect who had been working in Equatorial Guinea, according to the Fundacion Universitaria de Popayan, where he had studied.
Tejada, a 33-year-old economist, had been visiting her husband in Barcelona and was returning to Germany, where she was completing her doctorate at the University of Cologne, Colombia's Caracol Radio reported.
Australia
At least two Australians were killed, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said.
"Sadly, I can confirm that there were two Australian citizens onboard, a mother and her adult son from Victoria," Bishop said. "It would not be appropriate to disclose further details of our citizens at this stage, due to the privacy considerations of the family."
Officials are working to determine whether other Australian citizens or permanent residents were aboard the flight, she said.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of the victims of this shocking tragedy," Bishop said.
Argentina
Two Argentines were aboard the plane, the state-run Telam news agency reported, citing consular officials.
The Netherlands
The Dutch foreign ministry said there was at least one Dutch national on board.
Belgium
Belgium's foreign ministry said one Belgian national was on the plane. |
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Unofficial website tracking data suggested the aircraft made a sharp descent from its cruising height of 35,000 feet. Photo: SCMP Pictures
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SHARP DESCENT
Germanwings said the plane started descending one minute after reaching its cruising height and continued losing altitude for eight minutes.
"The aircraft's contact with French radar, French air traffic controllers, ended at 10.53 am at an altitude of about 6,000 feet. The plane then crashed," Germanwings' Managing Director Thomas Winkelmann told a news conference.
Winkelmann also said that routine maintenance of the aircraft was performed by Lufthansa on Monday.
Experts said that while the Airbus had descended rapidly, its rate of descent did not suggest it had simply fallen out of the sky.
France's DGAC aviation authority said air traffic controllers initiated distress procedures after they lost contact with the Airbus, which did not issue a distress call.
"The aircraft did not itself make a distress call but it was the combination of the loss of radio contact and the aircraft's descent which led the controller to implement the distress phase," a DGAC spokesman said.
The aircraft came down in an alpine region known for skiing, hiking and rafting, but which is hard for rescue services to reach.
The search and recovery effort based itself in a gymnasium in the village of Seyne-les-Alpes, which has a small private aerodrome nearby.
Transport Minister Alain Vidalies told local media: "This is a zone covered in snow, inaccessible to vehicles but which helicopters will be able to fly over."
But as helicopters and emergency vehicles assembled, the weather was reported to be closing in.
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x paham langsung terms yang akak cite ni
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masa descent heshe takde response bila ATC kontek kan
adakah sebab tgh sibuk nak selamatkan pesawat itu?
atau ala2 dah pengsan?
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