by Agency Reporter
The
cockpit voice recorder from the Air Algerie flight that crashed in Mali
in July is damaged and unintelligible, French investigators say.
They said the team was unable to extract information from one of the two black boxes found in the wreckage, BBC reports.
Flight AH5017 went down en route to Algeria near the Malian town of Gossi, killing all 118 people aboard.
France took a leading role in the investigation after 54 of its citizens were killed in the crash.
French officials have said they believe
bad weather was the likely cause of the crash on 24 July but have not
ruled out other possible explanations.
The voice recorder used magnetic audio
tape – common to older aircraft – but this was found broken and had to
be repaired, Remi Jouty, president of France’s BEA air accident
investigator, told reporters at a press conference on Thursday.
“There is sound on the tape but it is unintelligible,” he said.
“The device seemed to be recording but we
don’t yet know why it did not work, except that this was not a result
of the crash itself,” Jouty said, adding that it may have been caused by
a “simple technical problem”.
The system of using magnetic tape has since been replaced by digital technology in modern aircraft.
Jouty also said it seemed likely that the
plane had broken up on impact instead of in the air, based on the
strong concentration of debris in one area on the ground.
“When we look at the trajectory, this
leads us to believe that the plane did not break up into several pieces
while in flight,” he said. “This does not exclude that damage was caused
during the flight.”
Meanwhile, the French army says
investigators have left the site after transporting all useable DNA
material to French laboratories, according to the BBC’s Alex Duval Smith
in Mali.
The Malian army is guarding the site, which includes a container full of the passengers’ personal effects, she says.
Shortly before losing contact, the pilots
of flight AH5017 had asked permission to change route due to bad
weather after taking off from Burkina Faso.
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